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Gay
India News & Reports
2006
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see
Gay India News & Reports
1998-01
Gay
India News & Reports 2002
Gay
India News & Reports 2003
Gay
India News & Reports
2004
Gay
India News & Reports 2005
Gay
India News & Reports 2007 Jan-Jun
Gay
India News & Reports 2007 Jul-Dec
Gay
India News & Reports 2008 Jan-Apr
Gay
India News & Reports 2008 May-Dec
Also
see:
Gay India 2001-03
Gay Bombay /Mumbai 2006
Gay Hyderabad 2006
Gay Chennai /Madras 2006
Gay Bangalore 2006
Gay Bombay Yahoo Group: gaybombay@yahoogroups.com
1 Gay
prostitution on the rise in the City of Joy 1/06
2 Actor
and Director Anupam Kher is Happy and Gay 1/06
3 Anger
at 'shameful' India gay law 1/06
4 Protests
mount in India over arrest of gay men 1/06
5 Indian
gay ban may be reversed 2/06
6 Cops
track down eloped lesbian couple--held in hospital for
medical exams
3/06
7 Tamil
Nadu's first homosexual society 3/06
8 India's
celebrities speak up for gay rights 3/06
9 Court unites lesbian couple--huge 3/06
10 New Site: Matrimonials for Same-sex
Marriages 4/06
11 Family disowns 'royal' son for being
gay 6/06
12 'Same-sex visa a tough process 8/06'
13 Indian Politicians clueless about HIV? 8/06
14 India's first openly gay royal, Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil, has announced plans to adopt a child. 8/06
15 Being gay in India had never been easy 9/06
16 St Petersburg hot with India's gays 9/06
17 Amid a climate of growing sexual tolerance within urban India 9/06
18 Notables urge India to end 145-year ban on gay sex 9/06
19 India's gay prince has a happy birthday 9/06
20 Survey: Young Indians split over whether to scrap sodomy law 9/06
21 Why
we need to break the chains of India's gay people 9/06
22
I appreciate GayBombay Yahoo Group 10/06
22a Hijara
moving up in society to become elected member of Madhya
Pradesh Legislative Assembly 10/06
23 Two Orissa girls defy norms, get married 11/06
24 Islamic clerics address HIV, but not condoms 12/06
25 India's Law Criminalizing Homosexuality Hinders HIV Prevention, Violates Human Rights Of MSM 12/06
26 Tribe blesses lesbian 'marriage' 12/06
27 Second Gay Hyderabad Meeting Doubles Attendence 12/06
28 Sexuality minorities' take out rally against `discrimination' 12/06
29 `Sexuality minorities' take out rally against `discrimination' 12/06
30 Rape, sodomy equal before law? 12/06
31 India Prosperity Creates Paradox; Many Children Are Fat, Even More Are Famished 12/06
DNA
http://dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1005324&CatID=
January
03, 2006
1
Gay
prostitution on the rise in the City of Joy
Kolkata - As
homosexuals and bisexuals in India slowly come out of the closet,
there
seems to be a rise in gay prostitution in Kolkata. The joints
are
same
as those used for the flesh trade three to four years back.
Due to constant police raids, many such joints were forced
to close
down and the owners even saw their kitty drying up.
Now,
suddenly, with homosexuality coming out of the closet over
the last couple
of years, owners of these joints have got the opportunity
to reopen shop.
The
only difference is that previously a woman escorted a male to
these joints. Now, instead, a homosexual
sex
worker
accompanies the customer. Jeevan (name changed), the owner
of such a joint in central Kolkata, told DNA that although
the new
trend has helped him earn some money, income is not as
high as in the traditional flesh trade.
Previously,
I took Rs 250 for an hour as room charges. Now,
I cannot charge more than Rs 100. Apart from this, the
income of a homosexual sex worker
is much lower that that of a female sex worker.
Hence, my commission from them is also lower, Jeevan added.
He said the only positive aspect of this new trade is that there
are no chances
of police raids or trouble from the local goons,
which was the main concern with the traditional flesh trade.
People
Like Us (PLUS) is an organisation working for the
welfare of homosexual
sex workers. According to its statistics, around
1,000 homosexual sex workers are currently active in Kolkata.
The figure has risen
from around 100- 150 even two years back. Interestingly,
young homosexuals from the suburbs in Kolkata, are now coming
to Kolkata in search of clients. Some of them hail from well-to-do
families and are college students. They take up this profession
to make a quick buck, a PLUS spokesperson told DNA.
According
to him, currently, of around 1,000 homosexual
sex workers operating in Kolkata, 70 per cent are from the
suburban towns of Barasat,
Habra, Duttapukur and Howrah. Another interesting
factor has come to light. Women sex workers from the suburbs
who frequent
Kolkata everyday in search of clients are
mainly from these towns too. Pranjal is one such young sex
worker.
His
outlook is simple. I
come from a middle class family, and, at the same time, I love
partying. But my parents cannot afford my lifestyle. I am homosexual
and I arrive in Kolkata each weekend and serve some of my regular
clients in the evenings, Pranjal told DNA.
IndiaFM
News Bureau
January
3, 2006
2
Actor
and Director Anupam Kher is Happy and Gay
Actor
turned director Anupam Kher is all set for his next film titled Happy and Gay. Anupam will be taking
charge of direction and will act in the movie. Happy and Gay
is a state of mind rather than a statement on sexuality. The
film will go on the floors in August 06 and the star cast
is yet to be finalized. Anupam Khers first film as a director
was Om Jai Jagdish starring Anil Kapoor, Fardeen Khan and Abhishek
Bachchan. Kher also plans to produce a film called The
Hindu, which is based on the lives of Kashmiri
pundits.
11
January 2006
3
Anger
at 'shameful' India gay law
India
says same-sex relationships are "unnatural".
India's
laws on homosexuality threaten human rights and encourage the
spread
of HIV, a leading rights watchdog has told the
prime minister in a letter. Human Rights Watch wrote to Manmohan
Singh
after
police in the northern city of Lucknow allegedly
carried out a sting operation on gay men.
It
accused the police of "shameful" harassment.
Police said those arrested had engaged in "unnatural
acts".
Homosexuality is illegal in India and can carry
a 10-year sentence. 'Internet links' Human
Rights Watch
says that last week police
officers in Lucknow posed as gays on a website,
entrapping one man and forcing him to call
others who were then
arrested. Criminalisation
of people most at risk of HIV infection may
increase stigma and discrimination, ultimately
fuelling the
AIDS epidemic.
UNAIDS
Scott Long, director of Human Rights Watch's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
and Transgender
Rights Programme,
said: "Lucknow
police have a shameful record of harassing
gay men as well as non-governmental organisations
that work
with them. " They
are able to do so because India's government
clings to the criminalisation of homosexual
conduct, which
only prevents people from coming
forward for HIV/Aids testing, information
and services."
The
United Nations' Aids body, UNAids,
also condemned the arrests. Denis Broun, UNAids India coordinator,
said: "Criminalisation
of people most at risk of HIV infection may
increase stigma and discrimination, ultimately
fuelling the
Aids epidemic." Lucknow
police spokesman Ashutosh Pandey told Reuters
those arrested had "established online
internet links with gay groups outside the
country too" and
would not be released.
Dismissed
petition
The
145-year-old colonial Indian Penal Code clearly describes
a same-sex relationship as an "unnatural
offence".
Many people in conservative India
regard same-sex relationships
as illegal or even blasphemous.
In 2004, the Indian government
opposed a legal petition that
sought to legalise
homosexuality - a petition the
high court in Delhi dismissed.
The
government argued that the abolition of the law dealing
with what it termed as "unnatural sex
acts" could
result in an increase in delinquent behaviour. " While
the right to respect for private and family
life is undisputed, interference by public
authority in the interest of public safety
and protection of health and morals is equally
permissible. This
is precisely what
the law does," said
a government affidavit.
Reuters
January
12, 2006
4
Protests
mount in India over arrest of gay men
by
Palash Kumar, New Delhi
Gay activists held a rare
and noisy protest in the Indian capital on Thursday
demanding the release of four men arrested for homosexuality
and
running an online gay club. Homsexuality is banned in India
under a 19th
century law but is prevalent undercover. About two
dozen gay men and women and their supporters gathered outside
the
New Delhi
guesthouse of the northern Uttar Pradesh state which
ordered the arrest of the four last week. The protesters
from the
largely closetted gay community waved banners and placards
which read: "My
sexuality, My right," "Queer and Proud," and "I
am a man. I love a man. That's my only crime". "
The
entire case is fabricated," said Gautam Bhan, a gay rights
activist. "None of the men were having public sex. They
have been arrested simply because they are homosexual." Human
rights and anti-AIDS groups have slammed the arrests saying such
discrimination will hurt the fight against HIV/AIDS. " Criminalisation
of people most at risk of HIV infection may increase stigma and
discrimination, ultimately fuelling the AIDS epidemic," UNAIDS
India coordinator Denis Broun told Reuters. India
has 5.1 million people with HIV/AIDS, the second
largest number after South Africa.
New
York-based Human Rights Watch sent a letter to Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh, protesting against the arrests. " Lucknow
police have a shameful record of harassing gay men as well as
non-governmental organisations that work with them," said
Human Rights Watch official Scott Long in a
statement. In a similar incident in 2001, Long
said, police
in Lucknow raided the offices
of two non-government organisations working
on HIV/AIDS prevention and arrested four staff.
They
were accused
of running a gay sex
racket. An outcry by activists led to their
release after a month.
Veil
of Secrecy
India's
gay community is trying to lift the veil of secrecy surrounding
homosexuality in a nation where public
hugging or kissing among heterosexuals invites angry
stares and lewd comments. " I am queer and I know how difficult it
is," said Pramado Menon. "We have to hide our lives." In
the past year, three lesbian couples have hit the headlines
as they struggled to stay together despite public pressure
for them
to split up. Although activists have been pressing
for the scrapping of the anti-homosexuality law, the
government said last year
society was not ready to accept legalised homosexual behaviour.
Pink
News
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-490.html
14
Feburary 2006
5
Indian
gay ban may be reversed -- Activists
also believe changing the legal status of same-sex relations
would make it
easier for
gays and lesbians to think about coming out
by
Marc Shoffman - As
you cuddle up to your partner for Valentines night
this evening, spare a thought for Indian
gay couples in New Delhi who face arrest for declaring their
love.
Gay
sex has been banned
in India since colonial times. The Supreme
Court told the Delhi High Court to take another look at a
petition, which
has pleased
sexual rights groups.
Anjali
Gopalan, director of sexual rights group, the Naz Foundation,
told the
Agence France Presse, "The
very fact that the Supreme Court didn't
throw this out says a lot,"
" I think there is a change
and I'm hoping it gets reflected in our judicial system." Critics
dont
expect the law to be abolished
completely as it is also used to prosecute
child sex crimes. Activists
also believe
changing
the legal status of same-sex relations
would make it easier for gays and lesbians
to think about coming
out to
their families
and resist the overwhelming pressure
to get married.
Rahul
Singh, who runs the outreach programs for Naz said: "Parents
say it's a passing phase and once (my son) is married
it will pass.
They say I don't want him to be criminalized.
Many of them end up living a dual life." Opponents
of a law change say India is not ready to accept homosexuality.
This concern
has also been
echoed by the government. But Mr Singh said: "Change
in a society takes time, but
the law has to take the first
step."
Hindu
rightwingers in the country
have threatened to target
even straight
couples celebrating
Valentines
Day
which forces gay couples
to be even more secretive.
Times
of India
March 08, 2006
6
Cops
track down eloped lesbian couple--held in hospital for medical
exams
Vadodara, India - As the world celebrates International Women's
Day on Wednesday, two women will be forced to stay in police
custody, because they are in love with
each other.
The lesbian couple of Sonu Avtar Singh (21) and Rekha Marwadi (18), wanting
to start a new life, had eloped from Halol town in Panchmahals to a village
in Punjab
on January 1.
However, on Monday, they were forced to return to Halol in police custody after
Rekha's parents filed a complaint against Sonu, accusing the latter to have
kidnapped Rekha.
The case took a strange turn as both the girls on returning, admitted before
Panchmahals' collector Dinesh Brahmbhatt that they want to live together and
that no kidnapping had taken place.
Sonu, who dresses in shirt and trousers, told the collector that she wanted
to live like a man and that the two were happy together. In their complaint,
Rekha's
parents had alleged that Sonu was actually a boy dressed as a girl. The two
have been kept at the Halol referral hospital and are set to undergo medical
examination
by a gynaecologist.
They will then be presented before the local court,which will be asked to take "appropriate
action"."
We can not accuse Sonu of kidnapping under section 365 of the Indian Penal
Code.We cannot invoke section 377 of the IPC either which prohibits what is
called unnatural
sex," said Panchmahals' deputy superintendent of police, J K Bhatt.
He adds, "To invoke section 377, one has to prove penetration. We have
conducted a medical examination which proved that Sonu is a woman."
http://in.rediff.com/news/2006/mar/16ganesh.htm
March
16, 2006
7
Tamil
Nadu District's first homosexual society
by A Ganesh Nadar in Chennai
The Men Community Development Society is a milestone in Chennai,
a city definitely not known for its liberalism.
The Society
is for homosexuals.
Started on Wednesday by the anti-AIDS non-governmental organisation
Indian Community Welfare Organisation, the Society was formed
to address violations of homosexual men's human rights, help them get
help from
the government, to provide them support in times of need, and to
help them form more such organisations in other districts of Tamil
Nadu.
At the inauguration, most of those present complained of regular
police harassment. One member related how the police suspected
them to be prostitutes just because they carried condoms. "
On one hand the government advertises on radio, TV and newspapers to
use condoms and on the other hand the cops arrest us for carrying them," he
said.
Some of them had been thrown out of their jobs when their colleagues
learnt of their sexual preference. One man said his family had
accepted his homosexuality, but not society. Another narrated how he
got married just to satisfy his family
and still went out looking for love.
The event's chief guest, Dr Jaya Shreedhar, said homosexuals are
born with their sexual preference; it is innate and cannot be 'changed.'
Homosexuality is not 'abnormal,' she stressed. Gays are accepted
in Western countries but not here, she said. In fact, a Bill is being
mooted to make homosexuality legal, she pointed out.
The Society -- which has started off with 300 members and has identified
more than 7,000 future members in the city -- will educate its
members about sexually transmitted diseases, particularly HIV/AIDS,
help
them become financially independent, encourage them to save and
provide them medical help.
The members of the Society said they would help others like themselves.
They would stop them from becoming prostitutes, make them health
conscious and train them to make money without resorting to commercial
sex.
To address the common grievance of doctors treating homosexuals
with disdain, the Society has its own doctor and clinic.
It will have computers, driving, tailoring, beautician and folk
art courses for its members. The ICWO, which was formed in 1992,
has been working with homosexuals for the last six years in its efforts
to combat HIV/AIDS.
The Men Community Development Society can be contacted at: 044-2618
4392 and 044-55515742.
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-887.html
22 March 2006
8
India's celebrities speak up for gay rights
by Katherine Knowles
With the recent official founding
of gay group the Mens Community Development Society
(MCDS),
Indian celebrities have been moved to speak out about attitudes towards
gay
people in the popular paper Hindustan Times.
Male
supermodel Dino Morea kicked off the debate noting: when
I entered the modelling world after completing my graduation, I
had loads of stories about
homosexuals forcibly making you enter into an act with them. In
fact, I used to be very scared of them initially and always used
to maintain
a safe distance but then slowly I realized that my all such notions
were wrong. The model, who was famously photographed semi
naked apart from a flower garland concluded: On many occasions
gays can make great friends.
The actor
Zayed Khan suggested: gay
people follow their natural instinct and are not fake.
His liberal attitude delighted members of the MCDS when he noted, who
are we to judge whether they are right or wrong? In my view sexuality
of
a person hardly matters. I believe that we should accept it like
many other aspects of life and treat it as normal.
Given
that homosexuality is illegal in India, this liberalism might
seem surprising.
Although,
as the travel guide Gay India suggests, homosexuality
is as common as in any other country; an unspoken, unquestioned,
and unlabeled way of life integrated into family and village customs.
Academic Shivanada Khan argues that, the debate on sexualities
may even at times be perceived as a form of neo-colonialism
whereby Western
sexual ideologies have "invaded" Indian discourses
on sexuality and identity by professionals, laypersons, "straights" or "gays," and
whereby indigenous histories and cultures become invisible.
It
is clear that the terms of the debate have changed, with
groups such as the MCDS demanding and recognition and legitimacy,
and with discrimination
towards openly gay people a sad fact of modern Indian life.
The
film star Koena Mitra offered her opinion
to the debate: I
think Indian society needs to change its attitude towards
gays and lesbians. Why
should they be treated any different from others?
Its
a point of view that the MCDS, a group which grew out of
the Indian Community Welfare Organisation offering AIDS
and HIV
education and care, appreciates. A care worker, Mr Jaya
said: homosexuals
suffer police harassment, people don't employ them in
good jobs, and they
are marginalized.
I
don't understand why there should be so much apprehension about the
issue, concluded
Ms Mitra in her statement which gay rights supporters
hope will be influential
in changing attitudes, particularly among her young
fan base. Everyone
has the right to live life as they see fit and make
their own choices. There should be no discrimination on
the basis of
sexual preferences.
India's
courts are reviewing laws that make consensual gay
sex an offence punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
The Tmies
of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1471630.cms
March
31, 2006
9
Court unites lesbian couple--huge
implications for the gay movement in India
by Robin David
Vadodara - The order of a magistrate's court in small town Halol
may have huge implications for the gay movement in India.
On March 8 International Women's Day Judge A.
H. Parikh allowed a lesbian couple to live together after they told
the
court
that
they were two consenting adults and that the kidnapping charge
against one
of them was fabricated.
This was the first time such a case had come up in any court
in the country. The magistrate said they were free to settle anywhere they
wished and it was not necessary for them to return to their families.
Sonu Avtar Singh, 21, and Rekha Marwadi, 18, had eloped from Halol
town in the Panchmahals to a village in Punjab on January 1.
They were forced to return to Halol under police custody, after Rekha's
parents filed a kidnapping complaint against Sonu.
Judge
Parikh said the two women could not be held once the kidnapping charge
did not
hold.
From: "Prashant
Goel" <pg2@yahoo.com>
5
April 2006
10
New Site: Matrimonials for Same-sex Marriages
Dear Friends,
I have developed a site entitled "Matrimonials for
Same-sex Marriages (http://ccc.domaindlx.com/pg21/index.asp)".
You can use this site if you are looking for a same-sex life-partner
and you are an Indian or a non-Indian who wants to have an
Indian as his life partner.
The site has provision for publishing
your matrimonial and searching the database depending upon the choice of your partner.
While
publishing your matrimonial on the site, you can choose your
marital status from the following three options:
1. Un-entangled
(Un-married,
Widow/Widower, Divorcee, Separated)
2. Entangled in a Hetero-Marriage
but can take divorce after getting partner
3. Entangled in a
Hetero-Marriage and cannot take divorce, want a family friend.
If
you want to know
who is a 'family friend', please see the following web-page: http://ccc.domaindlx.com/pg21/ff.asp
Please
give as much publicity to this site as possible. Inform all
your friends about it. The government and society are giving
us extreme pain by continuously refusing us our right to marriage.
Let
us reduce
this
pain
from
the earth as much as possible by arranging marriages even without
this
right.
Please
wipe tears from the eternally weeping eyes of crores of Indian men,
women, and children. Your suggestions,
comments,
opinion all are acceptable and solicited. Regards and thanks.
Yours,
Prashant
PS:
Even if you are not looking for a life partner, kindly
visit
my site and
help
in publicizing it by informing all your friends about it.
(if the
site is down, then please try after some time. Sometimes
the web-server may be having excessive traffic. We are taking up
the
case with our
web-space providers.)
Sapa-AFP
Indian Online
June 25, 2006
11
Family disowns 'royal' son for being gay
New Delhi - The son of a former royal family in India said Sunday he
has been disinherited for admitting he is gay.
Prince
Manvendrasinh Gohil belongs to a family which once ruled the princely
state of Rajpipla
in the western state of Gujarat. "I told my parents I was gay," Gohil
told NDTV news channel in an interview. "Initially it was difficult
for them to accept it. They tried to convert me to heterosexuality.
The doctors told them that was not possible and I guess they could
not deal with the stigma," he said of his disinheritance.
The Indian Express newspaper said he was publicly disowned by his
parents two days ago after he told a vernacular magazine that he
was gay. Before
then he led a life away from the public eye at the Rajpipla
palace 100km from Vadodara city. Gohil, who heads a HIV
and Aids programme for the local government, said he has found support
from gay and
lesbian groups in India and abroad, NDTV reported. "All I want
to do is to ensure there is a discussion and people talk about homosexuality
and that we get some sort of social status," he said.
Gohil
added he had no regrets revealing his homosexuality
and bore no grudge against
his parents.
Indian
laws against homosexuality were originally enacted by British colonial
rulers in 1860. They include up to 10
years'
imprisonment and a fine, or both, for anyone found guilty of "carnal
intercourse against the order of nature." Although the law
is rarely enforced, its existence remains a source of irritation
and anxiety for gays and
lesbians in India. Indian royals were stripped of their titles
and kingdoms in the 1970s.
Times of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1908419.cms
August 20, 2006
12
'Same-sex visa a tough process'
by Radha Sharma
Ahmedabad - The lesbian girl who got a visa to Canada initially wanted to go on a student visa but when the consultant realised she had a lesbian partner in the country, he advised her to try out sexuality as grounds for immigration.
"Applying
for immigration on same sex grounds requires lot of expertise as
the couple is required to
prove the relationship on paper.
Application
requires details like how many times they had physical intercourse,
details of gifts they exchanged,
joint property they hold together and lot of other intimate information," immigration
consultant Lalit Advani said.
Associated Press
http://uk.gay.com/headlines/10297
August 26, 2006
13
Indian Politicians clueless about HIV?
Most legislators in India, the country with the most AIDS infections in the world, remain ignorant about the disease, with many believing it can be spread by sharing food, toilets and offices, an official said on Thursday.
The lack of AIDS awareness was revealed in a survey of 250 legislators that was released to Parliament Wednesday, the Hindustan Times newspaper reported in a story confirmed by Manmohan Sharma, who heads the parliamentary committee that wrote the report.
According to the poll, 64 per cent of Indian legislators believe sharing clothes can transmit HIV, the virus that can lead to full-blown AIDS, 56 per cent think that sharing food and utensils spreads the virus, 40 per cent said that contact with a co-worker spreads it, and 22.8 per cent believe that using the same toilet as an infected person can pass the virus to others, the paper reported.
Of perhaps even greater concern is the apparent ignorance among legislators about how to best prevent the spread of AIDS. According to the Hindustan Times, some 25 per cent of those questioned did not know that sex with multiple partners increases the risk of contracting AIDS, and the same number were unaware that using a condom prevents transmission. Some 46 per cent did not know that an infected mother can pass the disease on to her fetus, and 51 per cent were ignorant that a person can get the AIDS virus from blood transfusions, the newspaper reported, citing the study, which was not immediately available. No margin of error was given, but the report's sample represents nearly a third of the 787 legislators in the lower and upper houses of parliament.
UNAIDS said in May that India's 5.7 million infections meant the country has the highest number of people in the world living with HIV. But due to its large population - the country is home to more than a billion people - India's prevalence rate remains less than 1 per cent. The report comes soon after India said it would earmark $200 million US for the financial year 2006-2007 for its AIDS prevention program. The plan aims to accelerate a campaign to promote safe sex, popularise the use of condoms, remove the stigma surrounding the disease, expanding the network of treatment facilities and get more people on anti-retroviral drugs.
After
receiving the report, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said
it contained "very
interesting and provocative material on the perceptions and approach
of our elected representatives on a vital area of national policy,''
the paper quoted him as saying.??Other legislators called for more
discussion of the issue in parliament.
On the bright side, the survey found that all those questioned had heard of AIDS, usually from the media.
monstersandcritics.com
http://people.monstersandcritics.com/royalwatch/article_1196224.php/Gay_prince_to_adopt
August 30, 2006
14
India's first openly gay royal, Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil, has announced plans to adopt a child.
The 40-year-old prince was publicly disowned by his family after he came out as homosexual in an Indian newspaper. He has since been stripped of his title and inheritance. According to reports, Manvendra's decision to adopt comes after his family made efforts to repair relations with him.
His father, Raghubir Singh Gohil, recently told The Times of India newspaper that he regretted disowning him out of anger.He said: 'I did it in anger. I was pressurised by various people. He has been a good son.'
Manvendra has expressed a desire to adopt a teenage child and he plans for the child to be educated abroad.
Homosexuality is banned in India and punishable by up to 10 years in jail.
Although Manvendra came out to his family in 2002, his family had not expected him to go public about his sexuality. Only two months ago his mother issued a statement stating his sexuality was 'unsuitable in society.' Manvendra, who is chairperson of AIDS charity organisation Lakshya Trust, said: 'I came out as gay to a Gujarati daily because I wanted people to openly discuss homosexuality since it's a hidden affair, with a lot of stigma attached.'
From "Rajes Kale" jeetkale@yahoo.co.in
September 1, 2006
15
Being gay in India had never been easy, the law is harsh and not giving a lot of space for us. However in the last few months, gays find more and more places where they can express themselves and meet with others safely. The internet has become a virtual space where gays can meet safely, to speak about anything they like without censorship.
A website such as www.gaydate.in is offering gays in India the opportunity to express themselves in gay forums and blogs, meet thousands of other gays from all over India, and lately even to video chat others. Match making has become the art of gaydate.in where gays are matched according to their interests and personal taste.
This site is being run by Vikram Patel who spent years involved in the
gay community issues and an organizer of many protests against the so
called "sodomy law". He has dedicated his life for aiding gays
in their struggle to be free from the chains of society and prejudice.
Since its beginning, the site is visited by thousands each day, due to
the hunger and great need for the gays in India to have an opportunity
and place to meet easily with others.
"There are still a lot of difficulties in reaching every gay in need, letting him know of this chance to meet new friends easily" says
Vikram and requests everyone's help in promoting this site among those who haven't
been aware yet.
Let us hope his call will lead to a stronger united gay community with the power to change the way society thinks and acts.
Hindustan Times
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1792063,000600010001.htm
September 9, 2006
16
St Petersburg hot with India's gays
by
Sushmita Bose, New Delhi
Where is the pink rupee being spent in transit? The wealthier among
India’s gay community are thinking “exotic” these days and making a beeline for the Caribbean, the Maldives and Zanzibar, pop icon Freddie Mercury’s birthplace. Ashok Row Kavi, gay activist and chairperson of Humsafar Trust, says St Petersburg has emerged as a hot destination across the community, because “it is cheap and exotic”.
Then there is old favourite Amsterdam, and newly popular Dusseldorf and Morocco.
Travel
trade analysts say that there is no quantifiable data on gay travel,
but, in the domestic circuit,
there are at least three destinations that are popular with the community:
Goa, Pondicherry and Manali. “There is still a ‘foreign’ connect attached to Goa and Pondicherry, which makes them less judgmental and intrusive,” says an analyst who collects data on outbound and domestic travel trade, who requested anonymity as his work involves confidentiality. Goa, in fact, has an “open gay pub” in Panjim, something not too many “straight travellers” are
aware of. Nor are too many people aware that Chandigarh is another
emerging destination for gays.
There
are websites for all Indian metros to help gay travellers with information
and FAQs. In Mumbai, for
instance, there is gaybombay.org, which claims to help with travel
itinerary; it also has a ‘gbcalender’ that lists all gay events being held in and around Mumbai. “Delhi has at least three five-star hotels that give special schemes to gay tourists, but business is conducted strictly via word-of-mouth,” says London-based Arvind Gupte, a frequent traveller to New Delhi. “We
usually go to the bigger cities for the fun and the partying. For
a vacation we go to Goa or Pondicherry.”
According
to Dinesh S, fashion coordinator, there are gays who earn less than
Rs 15,000 a month, but who manage
to go abroad at least twice a year - usually Bangkok and Pattaya
in Thailand, and Sri Lanka, as both these countries are cheap and
accessible. "When the Dolce Gabbana came out with its hoarding showing Domenico Dolce posing with designer partner (and former lover) Stefano Gabbana, many people in India were curious why the ad was targeting the 'niche' gay community," says Dinesh. "The question was: is there a niche gay community that would spend so much? The answer is yes; even if we don't qualify as being SEC A, we spend substantial amounts on grooming and the feel-good factor." And
feel-good, he feels, is what travel is all about for the gay community.
International Herald Tribune
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/09/15/news/india.php
September 15, 2006
17
Amid a climate of growing sexual tolerance within urban India
by Amelia Gentleman
New Delhi - Amid a climate of growing sexual tolerance within urban India,
a campaign to force the government to decriminalize homosexuality is rapidly
gaining momentum. About 150 of India's most influential figures - from
the novelist Vikram Seth to the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen
- have joined their voices in a protest letter demanding the repeal of "cruel and discriminatory" legislation
banning gay sex.
The letter brings together senior names from India's traditionally conservative
elite - business, civil service and judiciary - alongside the more expected
representatives of human rights groups. "Some of India's most distinguished people have come together to say that this is a fundamental human rights issue which must be addressed," said
Siddharth Dube, a writer and senior official of the UN AIDS program,
or Unaids.
The signatories called for Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, which
bans gay sex, to be overturned immediately. The law has been used to "systematically persecute, blackmail, arrest and terrorize sexual minorities," said
the letter, which was to be published in Indian newspapers Saturday.
Hostility to the law has intensified for two reasons: It is seen as an
anachronism from a less tolerant era and health care officials, struggling
to contain India's AIDS epidemic, warn that it hampers their efforts
to contact vulnerable groups.
The letter, whose signers include Soli Sorabjee, a former attorney general,
and Nitin Desai, a former UN under secretary general, stresses that the
law has been "used by homophobic officials to suppress the work of legitimate HIV- prevention groups, leaving gay and bisexual men in India even more defenseless against HIV infection." The letter's release was timed to anticipate a critical ruling from Delhi's High Court, expected early next month, on the validity of the legislation. An HIV-AIDS prevention organization, the Naz Foundation, has sued to have Section 377 overturned, but its case was rejected on the grounds that "public morality" should "prevail over the exercise of any private right." The
petition is being heard again on appeal.
Unaids said in May that India had the highest number of people in the
world living with HIV - about 5.7 million. A few weeks later, the government's
AIDS-prevention body called for the law to be overturned, warning that "Section
377 can adversely contribute to pushing the infection underground."
Activists say internal government memos suggest the government is tilting in favor of decriminalization.
The petition seeks to broaden the issue from one of public health to a moral, human rights argument. Activists point out that the legislation was introduced by the British colonial authorities and does not reflect ancient Hindu cultural values. The Hindu epics reveal a tolerant approach to homosexuality, and the stone carvings on the temples of Khajuraho show men having sex with men.
Section 377 brackets gay sex with sex with animals and pedophilia, defining
it as an "unnatural" offense, punishable by up to 10 years'
imprisonment. Although the law is rarely enforced, its presence sends
a clear signal to law enforcement bodies, and police harassment of gay
men is widespread. Dube, one of the organizers behind the petition, said
the fear of being prosecuted in India for being openly gay had caused
him to live abroad for most of his adult life.
"People sometimes make the mistake of thinking that because this law is not often prosecuted, that means it is innocuous. It doesn't take prosecution in a law court to make people terrified. The fear of prosecution lingers," he said. "As
a gay Indian, one always feels like an outsider - ostracized. I felt like a criminal
all the time."
New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/16/world/asia/16india.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print
September 16, 2006
18
Notables Urge India to End 145-Year Ban on Gay Sex
by Somini Sengupta
New Delhi — A British-era relic is facing a new challenge in India, as a growing citizens’ movement rallies against a 145-year-old law still embedded in the Indian penal code that bans gay sex. On Saturday an open letter to the government will be officially unveiled, calling for the repeal of what is known by its official moniker, Section 377, which makes “carnal intercourse against the order of nature with man, woman or animal” punishable
by 10 years in prison.
The
letter is signed by an eclectic list of Indian writers, filmmakers,
lawyers and other luminaries,
including the author Vikram Seth, the actress Soha Ali Khan and a
former attorney general of the Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata
Party-led government, Soli Sorabjee. “In independent India, as earlier, this archaic and brutal law has served no good purpose,” the letter argues. “It
has been used to systematically persecute, blackmail, arrest and
terrorize sexual minorities. It has spawned public intolerance and
abuse, forcing tens of millions of gay and bisexual men and women
to live in fear and secrecy, at tragic cost to themselves and their
families.”
The letter comes less than two months after a similar plea from the government AIDS agency. In an affidavit to the Delhi High Court calling for a repeal of the law, the National AIDS Control Agency argued in late July that Section 377 poses a public health risk by driving gay men underground and impeding efforts to prevent the spread of AIDS. With more than five million cases of H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS, India ranks either first or second, depending on who is measuring, among countries with the largest number of infected people.
The statute is being challenged under a lawsuit brought in 2001 by a gay-rights advocacy group called the Naz Foundation, which argued that the law contravenes rights enshrined in the Indian Constitution, including equality, privacy and freedom of expression. The case was initially thrown out by the Delhi High Court on the grounds that the foundation did not suffer as a result of the law and so had no legal standing to sue. The Supreme Court of India earlier this year tossed the case back, instructing the Delhi court to review the case on its merits. The next hearing is scheduled for Oct. 4.
The
campaign to repeal Section 377 reflects a confluence of broad changes
sweeping this country, from health
concerns and urbanization in India to a growing awareness about India’s place in the world. A preface to the open letter, written by Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate and economist who is now a professor at Harvard, calls the law, codified in 1861, “a colonial-era monstrosity.” “That, as it happens, was the year in which the American Civil War began, which would ultimately abolish the unfreedom of slavery in America,” he wrote. “Today,
145 years later, we surely have urgent reason to abolish in India,
with our commitment to democracy and human rights, the unfreedom
of arbitrary and unjust criminalization.”
The
law is today most often used to prosecute cases of child sexual abuse,
and its backers warn that
its repeal could jeopardize efforts to arrest offenders. The office
of the solicitor general of India declined to comment on the law,
on the grounds that it is under litigation. Section 377 is rarely
now used to prosecute gay adults engaged in consensual sex, lawyers
and activists say, but it remains a whip with which to threaten,
blackmail and jail suspected gay men and lesbians where they gather — in
parks, bars and even, on occasion, on the Internet. Strictly speaking,
the statute makes it illegal to distribute condoms to gay men or
in Indian prisons.
As with most things in this country, whatever generalizations one can draw about attitudes towards homosexuality, its opposite is also just as likely to be true. And yet, stigma and scorn prevail. Indian newspapers earlier this year, for instance, carried the story of a woman who attempted suicide after being forcibly separated from her lover, whom she said she had married in a Hindu temple. In western Vadodara, also this year, the police filed kidnapping charges against a woman for running off with another woman; the two told local authorities, according to local news media reports, that they wanted to live together. In June came news that the scion of a former royal family had been disinherited after saying he was gay.
Gay.com/ The Advocate
http://www.gay.com/news/election/article.html?2006/09/18/4
September 18, 2006
19
India's gay prince has a happy birthday
India's Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil celebrated his birthday Sunday in his customary fashion -- by holding a music and arts festival in his family's Rajpipla palace -- having largely patched up months of family strife sparked when he came out in the media as gay, the Times of India reported.
For
the past eight years, Manvendra has celebrated his Sept. 17 birthday
by organizing the music festival,
where several prominent classical singers perform. "The idea is to provide an opportunity to young performers," Manvendra,
who turned 41 over the weekend, told the Times.
The festival was organized under the banner of the Lakshya Trust, the local AIDS/HIV nonprofit in Gujarat state of which Manvendra is patron. After announcing the event Wednesday, he politely avoided questions regarding his being disowned by the royal family upon coming out. However, the Times noted, the scenario has improved and the family has largely sorted things out: Manvendra said they would be attending the event.
Advocate.com
http://www.advocate.com/news_detail_ektid36750.asp
September 26, 2006
20
Survey: Young Indians split over whether to scrap sodomy law
by Ashok Sharma, AP
A campaign to repeal an Indian law that makes homosexuality a crime has split young people in New Delhi and Mumbai, with about half of them in favor of scrapping the legislation, according to a survey published Monday.
A campaign to repeal an Indian law that makes homosexuality a crime has split young people in New Delhi and Mumbai, with about half of them in favor of scrapping the legislation, according to a survey published Monday. The support for doing away with the sodomy law was surprisingly strong, and other findings of the poll appear to indicate that once-widespread prejudices against gays and lesbians are slowly disappearing. The poll, published in The Hindustan Times newspaper and conducted by the firm C fore, found that 52% of those surveyed in New Delhi, the capital, believe the sodomy law should be repealed. Another 31% favored keeping the law, while 17% were not sure.
Support
for legalizing homosexuality in Mumbai, India's financial and entertainment
center, was a bit
lower, with 46% of respondents in favor of scrapping the law and
40% against the move. Some 14% of respondents were unsure. Same-sex
marriage, however, was opposed by 53% of those surveyed in New Delhi
and 63% in Mumbai. The survey polled 415 people between the ages
of 15 and 25 and was conducted September 19–22, the newspaper
reported. No margin of error was given. Homosexuality has long been
taboo in India, and antigay prejudices remain widespread. But, just
as is the case in many traditional cultures, there also has long
been an underground gay and lesbian culture.
The law makes consensual sex between two adults of the same sex a criminal offense punishable by up to 10 years in prison. It was imposed in 1861 by British colonial authorities who ruled India until 1947. While prosecutions are rare, gay activists say police use the law to harass them. In recent years, health workers from the government and private organizations have complained that forcing gays and lesbians underground has hampered efforts to halt the spread of HIV in the gay community. Those complaints, coupled with loosening mores among India's expanding middle and upper classes, have pushed officials toward getting rid of the sodomy law.
Well-known
Indian author Vikram Seth earlier this month joined the fray, penning
an open letter that was
published in many Indian newspapers urging that the law be scrapped. A gay rights activist from Mumbai, Ashok Row Kavi, said Monday that regardless of the move to legalize homosexuality, gays and lesbians remain underground in New Delhi, long considered among the most strait-laced of India's major cities. "Gays are in [the] closet in New Delhi," Kavi
said of the survey.
Rediff.com
http://www.rediff.com///news/2006/sep/27ark.htm
September 27, 2006
21
Why we need to break the chains of India’s gay people
by Ashok Row Kavi
It's strange how the movement to annul the anti-sodomy laws has been proceeding. The latest being the hue and cry over the open letter by Vikram Seth and over 150 others including Amartya Sen and Arundhati Roy crying for the removal of Section 377 from the Indian Penal Code for being unconstitutional. The backlash against the movement has also started building up and now covers a whole spectrum from lunatic fringe right-wing groups to the equally loony liberals.
Time to dump Article 377? Tell us!
Some of the voices for keeping the sodomy laws are the usual set of culprits with the same old tired arguments confusing same-sex love with pedophilia, equating homosexuality with species suicide, and even a rather funny Shiv Sena argument that if 'all women became lesbians the population would collapse and India would get de-populated.' However, what interests me now is the way the political class is appropriating and co-opting the gay movement without looking at the health angle. In fact the only sensible statement till date that I can relate to has been the affidavit from the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) saying that Section 377 has 'become a hindrance in reaching out to and accessing population on the margins of society like men-having-sex (MSM) in the national effort to prevention and control HIV/AIDS.'
The real success of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) movement in India over the last decade has been to get gay men, hijras and male prostitutes into the inner core of the government's health programmes. I remember that when I attended my first AIDS Conference in Montreal in 1989 (it was actually the Fifth International AIDS Conference) the Indian health ministry had insisted that there were no homosexuals in India and gays existed only in the 'decadent and debauched Western world' (in fact, these were the exact words used by the health official in Montreal).
The fact that in the year 2006, the budgetary guidelines published by NACO, mention MSM and hijras (eunuchs) as the 'core population infected and affected by HIV and AIDS' is the biggest achievement till date for the GLBT community. The recent letter was the icing on the cake which means the gay movement will most probably see the light at the end of the tunnel. As a plenary speaker at the recent Outgames in Montreal where a pre-games human rights conference brought out homosexual issues into brilliant focus on a planetary scale, mine was strangely the only argument to look into the health issues of the emerging gay communities in Asia.
It is no use having our human rights if millions of our communities are decimated by HIV, AIDS and new drug resistant sexually transmitted infections (STIs) now spreading rapidly in the gay ghettoes of San Francisco, New York and Berlin.
In India, the first sentinel surveillance of hijras at Mumbai's Sion Hospital in 2005 gave a horrendous 49.5 per cent prevalence, which means one out of every two hijras will be dying if we don't get them medication soon. It has to be understood that the gay movement in China and India are presently poised on a single track engine that really must run on two tracks. One track is the health issues of sexual minorities. By tackling them head on, hijras, gay and lesbian communities can be empowered to take charge of their lives, engage their mental and physical health issues and join the mainstream of national life.
The other track is the human rights one. By removing laws which criminalise same-sex activity, these communities can join the mainstream, demand rights which facilitate access to health facilities and get on with their lives. Today, it is a criminal offence if a doctor does not report a patient with anal STIs because he can be arrested for being an accessory to a crime already committed (anal sex). The ridiculous argument that there have not been many prosecutions under Section 377 is laughable. Ask any gay man how many times he has become a victim of violence, extortion and blackmail with just the subtle threat of a policeman, goonda or even a friend trying to put the soft touch. Every gay man I have met carries at least one sorry tale of violence from police, goondas and assorted anti-socials who thrive on the gay world.
Among lesbians, one of the biggest problems is alcoholism and it needs to be tackled as a mental health problem on a priority scale. This came out along with depression and lack of access to both counseling on sexual rights. Lesbians amazingly have been the first ones who have started fighting heterosexist society by eloping and willfully living together as same-sex couples in Asia. In this they have stolen a march over gay men, a majority of whom are married to women and immediately jump on a bisexual and 'bi-curious' bandwagon. The few gay couples I have met are happily stuck in a never-ending rut of partying and liberal mumbo-jumbo.
The fight to remove anti-sodomy laws is much bigger and goes beyond being just a fight for sexual rights. It cannot possibly move forward without a whole gamut of reforms around women's issues. The anti-rape laws have to be reformed along with Section 377; they are humiliating for women who can be questioned in court over intimate details which need to be heard in camera. Male rape has never been addressed except under Section 377 where even the victim can be jailed for 10 years, which is why it is seldom reported. Rape and molestation of minors needs separate laws on the statute books and needs to be separated so that same-sex relations and pedophilia are not mixed into an unholy cocktail.
In fact, the Lawyers Collective has a whole slew of reforms suggested through consensus from workshops held all over the country. But, of course, the present movement against Section 377 will be the main battle ram to break through this bottleneck in the reform of such laws. I think the next step is going to come from the Women's Health Movement. I wonder how many have observed that we have no faculty which looks into anything but the reproductive health of women. Women who are post menopausal or old have not a single department in any hospital I know in Mumbai. Obviously the gay movement can be a great ally for women in their fight for their sexual rights.
And though I think Arundhati Roy is an unreadable author who has strayed into magical reality from the world of fiction, she may have an inkling that breaking the chains of gay men, hijras and lesbians in this country would be the first step in finally winning that crucial battle for women.
Ashok Row Kavi is India's leading gay rights activist.
From: gaybombay@yahoogroups.com
October
21, 2006
22
I
appreciate GayBombay Yahoo Group
Gay Bombay
is an organization that works for the betterment of gays and, creates
an healthy and friendly atmosphere for gays to meet and interact with
one another.Not only that it also generates a ray of hope in the eyes
of every gay who steps here--hope which is the beginning of life.
And I appreciate GayBombay for its good work. As the name suggests
gay Bombay is basically for gays and its work would not be useful if
a gay dosen't knows about it.Yes ,this happened to me.There was someone
who was the first person who knew
both gaybombay and me and who also knew that I am a gay. However I
was not made aware of GB which affected my life to a large extent.
And I don't want anybody else to get affected in the way I was affected.
Hence I would say, a small bit of help from your end can change or
save someone's life. And that person might further turn out to be a
saviour for many others.
GB is working in the support of gay community and I appreciate it.
Also the gays should support each other. Thank
you.
GayBombay@Yahoogroups.com
Oct
26, 2006
22a
Hijaras moving up in society to become elected member of Madhya
Pradesh Legislative Assembly
Posted by: Adel
There is a Bollywood film entitled Shabnam Mausi about
an ambitious tru life hijra who won a local election defeating a
do nothing corrupt & murdering politician. The movie is based on
this woman's life and India's best male actors portray the Shabnam
and the
hijara clan.
If a former Congress minister and his supporters have their way then
the first eunuch Member of the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly
Shabnam Mausi would lose her membership of the House. The Congress
is upset with her spat with former public works department minister
Bisahulal Singh, which saw her at her street-smart thunder clapping
best.
Just a day earlier, Shabnam had created a stir in the state secretariat
by taking on the president of theShahdol nagar panchayat (town municipality)
. A eunuch wave swept the state with the advent of the new millenium.
Five of them, now christened as the paanch Pandavas, got elected
to various public offices. Kamla Jaan, a stern looking no-nonsense
eunuch,
captured the Katni mayor's post, while Meenabai became the president
of the Sehora town municipality, the oldest civic body in the state.
Heera Bai and Gulshan were elected corporators in Jabalpur and Bina,
respectively. However, the topping on the cake came when Shabnam
Mausi won the by-election to the Sohagpur constituency, which fell
vacant
when the sitting MLA died, polling more votes than that polled by
the Congress and BJP candidates put together. The voters don't regret
their
decision. In less than a year, Shabnam has done more work for them
than her predecessors had in an entire term. In the assembly, she
has outshone her colleagues with considered and weighty arguments:
she
was the only one in a house of 320 who opposed the formation of Chhattisgarh
on the grounds that it would weaken the social fabric of a state
which has remained one for forty years. "She has more native intelligence
than most other Members of the Legislative Assembly and her grasping
power is the most phenomenal I have seen,'' says Speaker Sriniwas Tiwari,
a veteran of two terms in the chair.
Shabnam Mausi knows and can converse fluently in 14 languages and
has adequate knowledge of the Constitution. At one time, she had
a busy
career in Bombay acting in bit roles in films starring Amitabh Bachchan
(Amar Akbar Anthony) and Rajesh Khanna (Janata Hawaldar). She does
not let go of any trick to get her work done. Already, despite being
an independent, she has more clout than other legislators. In the
corridors of the secretariat, it is well known that none of her requests
are
ever refused. She has managed to get a 30-bed hospital sanctioned
for Dharmpuri in her constituency and has got a new filter plant
for the
town. "I have won on the ground that I'll do justice without fear
or favour, since I have no one of my own. I hope I am doing that,''
Shabnam Mausi says.
Chief Minister Digvijay Singh considers her an important ally: "She
is a brave, intelligent woman who knows her job. I would rather have
her on my side than see her in the opposition.' ' Despite his political
acumen, Digvijay Singh has failed to find a method to deal with Shabnam.
While he keeps her mollified by sanctioning work in her constituency,
his actions are being seen as favouritism by his own party legislators.
This has led many to believe that eunuchs may be the answer to the
shamelessness and greed of the modern day politician. However, despite
their success, it will be a long time before main stream parties
give them tickets to contest elections.
Times of India
http://timesofindia .indiatimes. com/articleshow/ 322874.cms
November 5, 2006
23
Two Orissa girls defy norms, get married
by Satyanarayan Pattnaik
Koraput - Two Kondh women from Orissa's Koraput district have defied all norms of their tribal society to live as 'man and wife' after tying the knot recently. Bateka Palang, 30, wed her bride, 25-year-old Maleka Nilsa of Ghumuru village in Bandhugaon block in a traditional ceremony at Dandabadi, a remote village in Narayanpatna block, in the presence of family.
The village has given its grudging approval—the elders have asked residents not to talk about it to outsiders for fear of shame—to
the relationship that was formalised after all the usual wedding
rituals, including dowry changing hands.
Villagers said the women who wed were
cousins and their relationship had developed when Bateka used to
visit her would-be wife's home. "About four years ago, I had gone to my cousin's home and found a nice friend in Maleka. She was caring and loving. Gradually we started spending more time with each other but we had never thought that one day we would get married," Bateka
said.
Initially the girls' parents did not
take their relationship seriously, but gradually their family members
became suspicious about them. Repeated threats by the families failed
to separate them. As community pressure mounted, the girls ran away. "We resisted their marriage because it was against our tradition. But they were in no mood to listen and eloped. They were later caught at a village fair. Finally, we were compelled to get them married according to our tradition. I have accepted Maleka as my daughter-in- law," said
Panti, Bateka's mother.
The phenomenon of same-sex marriages
is new in tribal society, said Bhubaneswar- based Tribal Research
and Training Centre director A B Hota. "Tribal tradition is totally opposed to same-sex marriages," he added, hinting at the pressure that must have been brought to bear on the girls. According to Kondh tradition, the groom's family has to give a dowry to the bride's parents. "We gave a tin of wine and a cow to the girl's parents before the marriage," Panti
added.
"We are happy after getting each other as life partners and are committed to living together. If our community members or families try to separate us, we will run away again," the
couple said.
Associated Press
4 December, 2006
24
Islamic clerics address HIV, but not condoms
by Aijaz Hussain
Public health authorities in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir have found an unexpected ally in their battle against HIV/AIDS in the deeply conservative region. The Jammu-Kashmir state AIDS prevention and control agency has roped in hundreds of Islamic clerics to carry the message of safe sexual practices to Muslim believers and the state's mosques and seminaries have become the vanguard of an anti-AIDS campaign, officials said on Friday.
Top Muslim cleric Mufti Nazir Ahmed
usually weaves his sermons at a mosque in Kashmir around Islamic
tenets that urge Muslims to refrain from promiscuity and homosexuality
-- widely believed to be among the major reasons for the spread of
AIDS. "Wherever I deliver a sermon, I talk about AIDS. Methods to prevent AIDS corresponds exactly with the teachings of Islam. If one follows the Islamic way, by no means can one contract AIDS," Ahmed
told the Associated Press on Friday.
Jammu and Kashmir AIDS Prevention and
Control Society, the state-run HIV/AIDS prevention agency, says it
has trained 600 Islamic clerics to spread the message of safe sexual
practices. "Islamic scholars have helped us in a big way to spread the anti-AIDS message, and I can proudly say that today 90 percent of the population in Jammu-Kashmir knows about the disease," said
Mohammad Amin, a state health official. At least 37 people have died
of AIDS in Jammu-Kashmir over the last decade while another 931 people
have tested positive for HIV or AIDS, he said. India, with 5.7 million
HIV-positive people, has the highest number of HIV cases in the world.
Muneer Ahmed Masoodi, a community health
officer, said the participation of religious scholars has brought
down AIDS infection rates in Ghana, Senegal and Uganda. "WHO and the United Nations have been convinced by the experiment," Masoodi said. To avoid offence, Islamic preachers avoid references to condoms in their sermons. "Faith plays a great role in modeling the behaviour of a person and we have effectively used it in our campaign against AIDS," said
Amin
http://www.pharma-lexicon.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=58034
05 December 2006
25
India's Law Criminalizing Homosexuality Hinders HIV Prevention, Violates Human Rights Of MSM, UNAIDS Official Says
India's law criminalizing homosexuality
is undermining the fight against HIV/AIDS and violates the human
rights of men who have sex with men, Denis Broun, UNAIDS India coordinator,
said on Thursday, Reuters UK reports (Zaheer, Reuters UK, 11/30).
The law, enacted in 1861 and known as Section 377, makes "carnal intercourse against the order of nature with man, woman or animal" punishable
by up to 10 years in prison and, when strictly interpreted, makes
it illegal to distribute condoms to gay men and men in prison. The
law -- which seldom is used to prosecute gay adults in consensual
rela