Home / Contact / Stories,
News & Reports / Photos
Worldwide Gay Life,
Sites and Insights
Stories + Photographs + News + Reports + Links
Gay
India News & Reports 1998-2001
Also
see
Gay
India News & Reports 2002
Gay
India News & Reports 2003
Gay
India News & Reports 2004
Gay
India News & Reports 2005
Gay India News & Reports
2006
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 A
Lesbian Film Idyll, and the Movie Theaters Surrender 12/98
2 Once
Ostracized, India's Secretive Eunuchs Get Enfranchised 7/00
3 Gay Group Finally Part of Indian Independence
Parade in New York City 8/00
4 Pune's
lesbians come out of the closet, and into their own 11/00
5 Lesbians
cry for space but very few care 1/01
6 Film on gay lovers set to create ripples
5/01
7 NGO charged with running gay club
7/01
8 Gay culture started in UP in '98 7/01
9 The
Internet: India's Different Gay Divide 7/01
10 Respect
rights of gays, lesbians: NGOs 7/01
11 A
gay rights/heath group in New Delhi is challenging the Indian
government's classification of gay sex as a criminal offence
12/01
New York Times
December 24, 1998
1
A Lesbian Film Idyll, and the Movie Theaters Surrender
by Barry Bearak
New Delhi, India - Of the two beautiful women, one was married to a cad, the other to
a fool, and when these husbands proved neglectful, the wives themselves
fell into bed, their fingers touching each other's skin as if feeling
an intricate brocade. This scene from "Fire" is the first
time an Indian film has explicitly shown homosexual relations, an event
both repellent and opportune to a waning fringe Hindu movement known
as Shiv Sena. Its offended minions have attacked theaters, shutting
down the movie in Bombay, New Delhi and other big cities.
"
I have become the victim of an Indian gestapo," lamented Deepa
Mehta, 43, the film's director. "This is so very ridiculous --
and also so scary. I don't even think it's the lesbianism that threatens
them. It's that the movie says women have choices, and that is frightening
to a male-dominated society."
Ms. Mehta, who divides her time between Toronto and New Delhi, was
seated in a front room of her parents' home here as three severe-looking
men with automatic weapons held vigil outside. These bodyguards were
ordered by the Supreme Court. Already shown in several countries, "Fire" is
a two-year-old, award-winning film that has struck some critics as
sensitive and acute and others as a soap-operatic bore. The government's
Censor Board approved the movie without cuts in May, and it had been
playing to good crowds for two weeks before Shiv Sena discovered the
nature of its romantic heart.
"
Is it fair to show such things which are not part of Indian culture?" Balasaheb
K. Thackeray, Shiv Sena's leader, asked in a magazine interview. "It
can corrupt tender minds. It is a sort of a social AIDS."
Using a politically correct mix of men and women and alerting the news
media beforehand, so-called Shiv Sainiks rampaged through a matinee
show in Bombay on Dec. 2, smashing glass and burning posters. The next
day, theaters in New Delhi, Pune and Surat were similarly hit. Then
came a theater in Calcutta, though the audience there fought off the
marauders and the movie remained open.
With these highly publicized incidents, the nation's elite began taking
sides. The venerable film star Dilip Kumar spoke in favor of artistic
freedom only to find near-nude Shiv Sainiks circling his home. If Kumar
favored such cinematic immodesty, they reasoned, he should be treated
to a continuing procession of men in underpants.
For India's Hindu nationalist leadership -- troubled by heaps of dirty
linen among the strange bedfellows in its coalition government -- its
Shiv Sena allies have become an embarrassment. Thackeray's party controls
the populous state of Maharashtra, but his support is accompanied by
his tongue, an instrument that has praised Hitler while denouncing
Christians, Muslims and Sikhs. This year, a report of a judicial inquiry
named him a provocateur of frenzied Hindu mobs that in 1992 burned
Muslim homes and businesses and killed 1,200 in Bombay.
Recent parliamentary elections have shown a drop in the Shiv Sena's
appeal to disaffected Hindu slum-dwellers. Thackeray seems to be grasping
for issues. Just before attacking "Fire," he tried to have
the Pakistani cricket team banned in India, a notion rebuked by Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee. The prime minister also has condemned
the movie theater violence, though it is the Supreme Court that has
commanded protection for Ms. Mehta and the film's exhibition. Theater
owners so far are unwilling to reopen the film. The national Censor
Board has decided to review its approval of "Fire."
Controversy is nothing new to Indian censor boards, especially given
the prodigious film industry's simultaneous instincts for prudishness
and lust. In the 1970's, kissing on the lips was being debated while
the very same movies reliably featured orgiastic dances by scantily
clad women. Today, bedroom embraces remain as timid as Rock Hudson
and Doris Day, though virtually every film has singing sweethearts
who do so much pelvic thrusting that a love scene appears more like
an exercise video. "
Erotic movement: this is the devil's food of Hindu cinema," said
Vishnu Khare, a film critic. "Everyone may remain fully clothed,
but there is a lot of sexual posturing and rubbing together of bodies.
It is a supreme form of voyeurism." Violence, including rape,
is also customary in the films. "The victim is either the hero's
sister or the hero's brother's wife," Khare said. "It can't
be the heroine because by becoming a rape victim a woman becomes untouchable.
As soon as I see a hero's sister-in-law, I know she is there to be
raped and then killed."
Foreign films are held to a different standard. In New Delhi, some
two dozen theaters show "morning movies," a popular pre-noon
display of soft pornography from other countries. "If it's a white
female torso, nobody minds it," Khare said. "It merely proves
to Indians how fallen and decadent white people are."
Still, with American films beamed nightly on television, many Indians
fear that their bedrooms are being colonized and their sexual conventions
transformed. To some, this sexual timorousness may seem odd. After
all, this is the land of the Kama Sutra and ancient triple X-rated
temple carvings.
Acceptance of homosexuality remains uncommon here, and this was especially
so at the Shiv Sena headquarters in northern New Delhi. Inside a tiny
office sat the group's local chief, Jai Bhagwan Goyal, 43, a small-factory
owner. "Even if we assume lesbianism does happen, what is the
point of showing it to people?" he asked in exasperation. "Everyone
knows what goes on between a husband and wife, but they do not do it
in the middle of a road."
To further make his point, Goyal made a few phone calls and brought
together 10 women from the group. Dressed in saris and shawls, these
housewives were pained to discuss a world where homosexuality even
existed, let alone one where it was portrayed in a movie. "This
is an insult to Indians everywhere, and we would gladly go to jail
or even die before we allow such a thing to be shown," a woman
said as the others nodded.
Goyal then ushered them out. He and his men had something to do that
could not involve mixed company. He had obtained a bootleg video of "Fire" and,
for the first time, would see the film. The seven men watched it at
Goyal's factory so as not to defile their homes.
They switched it off before it ended, in part because their copy was
in English instead of one dubbed in the more familiar Hindi. Still,
they had viewed "Fire" long enough to see the much-talked-about
sex and had reach a shared conclusion. "Nothing could ever be
more disgusting," Goyal said, though this simple pronouncement
did not seem quite enough. So he repeated himself. "Nothing," he
said. "Nothing, nothing."
ABCNEWS.com/Reuters
July 2000
2
Once Ostracized, India's Secretive Eunuchs Get Enfranchised
by Leela Jacinto
At 23, Pummy Sharma deserted his young wife, parents and siblings and ran away
from his New Delhi home to a life of ill-repute. Sharma was tired of leading
a double life - working in his brother's garment factory by day and performing
female roles in traditional mythological plays at night. "I couldn't take
it anymore," he told ABCNEWS.com in a telephone interview from New Delhi. "I
wanted to be a part of the hijra family. I had an attraction to men. I wanted
to celebrate my sexuality."
But the life he ran to, was far from celebratory. Re-christened "Pooja," Sharma
joined a "house" of hijras, a group India's English language press
calls eunuchs but which includes males born with deformed genitalia, hermaphrodites,
eunuchs and homosexual cross-dressers. A highly secretive sub-culture, hijras
have existed on the fringes of Indian society since ancient times, but there
are varying estimates of the number of hijras in India. Unofficial figures range
from 500,000 to 2 million.
Considering themselves neither men nor women, members of this so-called "third
sex" generally adopt feminine names and dress and are traditionally referred
to as "she." Faced with lives of isolation, poverty and public ridicule,
hijras often resort to prostitution for economic survival. But this week, history
was made when the people of Gorakhpur, a town in northern India, elected a hijra
to the post of mayor of the town. Asha Devi, an independent candidate, won the
election by a decisive majority - she polled 1,09,849 out of a total 2,31,240
votes - a blow to the major parties.
Devi's election victory is not the first in the hijra community. Earlier this
year, another independent candidate Shabnam Mausi - or "aunt" Shabnam
- was elected to the legislative assembly in a neighboring state. Many observers
believe the new trend of electing civic-minded hijras into public office is the
beginning of a new chapter of enfranchisement in the history of India's eunuchs.
Exalted Past, Seedy Present It wasn't always this way. Hijra traditions, including
highly secretive initiation rites, are ancient, but hardly exalted. Early Hindu
texts, including the Kama Sutra, contain references to the third sex and bear
descriptions of impotent men who danced and cast spells.
In the past, hijras earned their keep in the royal courts, guarding harems and
entertaining patrons. But with the dying of the old traditions, hijras have increasingly
had to resort to petty extortion and the sex trade to make ends meet. A common
means of money-making these days is gate-crashing wedding and birth ceremonies
and threatening not to leave until they are paid off. With their garish jewelry, heavy makeup, gaudy sarees and a raucous penchant
for raunchy songs, hijras are invariably, but reluctantly, paid off. A common
myth that a hijra's curse can render you impotent only adds to society's fear
and revulsion. Allegations of adolescent boys being forcibly sexually mutilated
by hijras - a charge hijras and social workers working with them vehemently deny
- adds nothing to their social standing.
While they enjoy a ceremonial status in Indian society, often the most basic
amenities such as access to health care, education, jobs and housing are denied
them. A Brighter Future? But the recent elections of hijras to public office
offers hope for many. Devi's success did not come without a fight. Even the basics
of bureaucracy posed challenges. One of the first stumbling blocks was election
ballot which offers two gender options.
Devi, born as a male named Amarnath Yadav, listed herself as a she. Devi's election
victory came from a campaign promise that was simple and effective: she promised
to eradicate corruption from civic offices and provide good roads, drainage and
clean drinking water. In the rough-and-tumble of India's increasingly corrupt
political life, it was a promise that proved popular with the citizens of Gorakhpur.
Observers said her victory was an indication of the electorate's growing disenchantment
with political parties.
Local media reports noted with a hint of humor that given the impotence of most
politicians, electors decided they may as well vote eunuchs into power. But it's
an opinion that incenses Anjali Gopalan, executive director of the Naz Foundation
India Trust, a New Delhi-based non-profit organization working on HIV and sexual
health. "That's just the sort of thing society would say," she told
ABCNEWS.com.
" The fact is, this is a phenomenal happening. It's a case of pulling people
up and once that happens, they only get stronger. What's more, hijras elected
into office serve as a role model for the community." The Outsiders In an
odd twist, hijras, for long ostracized as freaks, are now being courted by mainstream
local and national parties But most hijras are unwilling to give up their outsider
status - for political ends.
" A lot of hijras run on the platform that they are neither men nor women
and that as outsiders, they will not get wrapped up in the sort of internal politics
that leads to corruption," said Kira Hall, a professor of anthropology at
Stanford University.
However, some experts say the voting of hijras into power was a sort of protest
vote and are skeptical on how effective they will be in politics. Hall, who followed
Shabnam Mausi for a brief period after she was elected, does not share this skepticism. "People
do respond to her differently, a lot of times with amusement, but she is surprisingly
well respected in her constituency and in the legislative assembly," said
Hall.
"It's a significant step towards their enfranchisement. When any marginal
group enters the legislative system, governmental power will necessarily lead
to more recognition for the community." Sharma endorses this view. "If
you compare our lot now with what we had 10, five years ago, we have so much
more support now. We now have access to educational facilities, health facilities,
it's much better now, much better," he said.
Reuters contributed to this report - ABCNEWS
Newsday, Melville, New York ( http://www.newsday.com/ )
August 18, 2000
3
Gay Group Finally Part of Indian Independence Parade in New York City
by Lisa Munoz, Staff Writer
At least one group in this Sunday's 20th annual Indian Independence
Day parade will be celebrating more than breaking away from England.
After eight years of trying to participate in the parade, the
South Asian Lesbian and Gay Association will join floats, dancers,
famous "Bollywood" actors
and thousands of spectators in Madison Square Park in Manhattan.
"
It is an achievement for us," said Rohit Burman, a member of the
group. "We feel this is a pretty historic moment." The group
participated in the parade in 1992, and Burman said it has applied
to participate every year since then. However, Burman said the group
that organizes the parade, the Federation of Indian Associations, ignored
their requests, telling them their applications were late or not received
or that the group was not part of the Indian community. "They
would also say gays and lesbians don't exist in the Indian community," said
Rohini Suri, another member of South Asian Lesbian and Gay Association.
So this year, Burman and Suri's group decided to enlist the help
of Community Board 5 in Manhattan and other city officials. Burman
credits
those leaders with bringing the two groups together in a meeting
in July. At the meeting, the Federation of Indian Associations
was threatened
with the possibility of not being able to use Madison Square
Park. "We
felt very strongly that we shouldn't support the FIA with their discriminatory
behavior," said Kyle Merker, chair of Community Board 5.
A month after the meeting, the gay and lesbian group had a spot
in the celebration. Suresh Deshmukh, the Federation of Indian
Associations' joint secretary, said: "We are not saying that we support what
they do and all that. We are just seeing them as Indians. "Why
shouldn't they be in the parade?" he asked rhetorically.
The parade, which begins at 2 p.m. Sunday on Madison Avenue and
40th
Street, commemorates
India's independence from England in 1947 and is the largest
celebration of the Indian community in New York City.
"
It's the first time they'll ever see us," said Suri. "Instead
of being invisible, we'll be right there in front of them." Burman
said that though they were initially apprehensive about conditions
that the association would impose, everyone is happy and grateful to
participate in the parade. The conditions turned out to be simply that
the group not do anything to defame India. Deshmukh said the association
only wanted groups who wanted to show pride in India. "It's not
some cultural show, it's about Indian independence," said Deshmukh. "I
don't know why it's being made into such a big deal."
Express
India (http://www.expressindia.com/)
November 22, 2000
4
Pune's lesbians come out of the
closet, and into their own
by Arindam Ghatak
Pune - Most birthdays are special, and this one was especially so. The Organised Lesbian
Alliance for Visibility and Acceptance (OLAVA), the first and only group for
lesbian, bisexual and transgendered women in Pune, celebrated its first birthday
on November 21. For members and guests at the function, the party line was
simple and direct: "Come out, wherever you are.'' The organisation's name, explained Chatura, who hosted the party, translates
into moist in Marathi. "Olava suggests the warmth and tenderness two women
are capable of sharing in a relationship. We opted for Marathi since we want
our group to reach out to every section of society and not just the urban elite
middle class.''
Over 100 women and some men from all over the country congregated in Pune at
the party, also attended by around 20 women's organisations. Clearly, it was
a joyous moment for all: a colourful OLAVA banner fluttered high, personal
experiences were shared as were tears. Solidarity messages were emblazoned
across the walls, among them a quote by American blues singer Janis Joplin: "Don't
compromise yourself. You are all you've got.''
Oorja (name changed), said, "We were baptised into existence by Deepa
Mehta's film Fire. We realised that there were no organised groups in Pune,
unlike other cities, who could protest against the vandalism that followed
the film's release. That, apart from the need to create space and support networks
for lesbian and bisexual women, spurred us on.''
When it was formed, OLAVA had only four members. Today, its membership has
inched up to 15. It has helped two women who were on the verge of running away
from home because their families and friends rejected them.
Chatura narrated her coming-out experience: "In 1994, at a workshop in
Pune, Manisha Gupte, the co-founder of the women's organisation MASUM, spoke
about the pain and pleasure of alternate sexuality. I had never heard such
a positive validation of ourselves. That was the first time I had the courage
to tell myself that I was happy being a woman who loves other women. " I called up Manisha that night. She told me, 'Be happy you have found
yourself'. Since then, it's been a journey of reclaiming the dignity of that
moment.'' Chatura's parents, who were present in the room, gave her the thumbs
up sign after her little speech. "Looking around the room, I can see several
potential friends, new friends, straight people, gays, lesbians, feminists, happily
married men and women with their children, and of course people from various
religions. This amalgamation is a pointer towards a beautiful picture of a cosmos
condensed into this small room. If only the world would take some tips from us,''
remarked Manisha Gupte.
Adding that it is a myth that homosexuality was an urban phenomenon, Gupte
continued, "I have been working with rural women for years. I have women
rejoicing in their love for other women in villages and small towns, and not
all of it is platonic. Invisibility and a quest for identity hampers them as
much as it hampers us, and any one deviating from the norm is punished. The
very fact that we can stand here and express ourselves today confirms that
we have come a long way. But it is only the beginning.''
The participants also resolved to fight homophobia and the archaic Article
377 of the IPC, which states: Of Unnatural Offence: Whoever voluntarily has
carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal
shall be punished with imprisonment for life or imprisonment of either description
for a term which may extend for ten years and shall be liable to fine. And,
perhaps, start helplines in the future.
Another guest, Gomti, perhaps spoke for all the participants when she said, "We
have a lot of fun too. I am sick of the media projecting us as distressed and
neurotic minorities. Can we do away with this viewpoint once and for all?''
On that note, the celebrations continued into the night.
Indian
Express (http://www.indian-express.com )
January 5, 2001
5
Lesbians cry for space but very few care
by Saikat Datta
Panchgani, India - She is also a woman. A factor that complicates and adds to the denial of rights
to a woman who just happens to love other women. It is an eclectic group of
women at the National Conference on Human Rights. Some young and some old,
here to ask for a right to live within a space they can rightfully call their
own.
In a society where homosexuality is discussed only in whispers, this is a
confused group which fights loneliness in a confused world. "All my
life I am told that I have to grow up, marry a nice looking man and then have
kids. But the fact is I don't love men,'' says Depika from Sangini, a group
that supports lesbian women.
For long a sexual minority, they are looking for an identity and space. A
simple fact that is denied every day in their secret lives. "There is
no legal standing, no counselling and no understanding. Instead we have to
face ostracisation
and prosecution from parents and peers,'' says Depika.
The first step is in recognising this as discrimination. From self to the community,
both have to come to terms with the fact that this is a denial of human rights.
And being a woman doesn't make it any easier. With a subjugated history in
society, getting to express their sexual freedom becomes a dream.
In India there is some succour from the fact that there is no organised hatred
towards gays and lesbians. "Unlike the West we don't have any case of
organised hate movements against this community,'' points out Arvind Narayan
of the Alternative Law Forum. His Bangalore-based group has been fighting
for the rights of sexual minorities among other issues for the past few years.
But there have been cases of individual harassment and humiliation. "Many
cases of police extorting money or subjecting gays to illegal detention simply
because they were with other men come in,'' he says. And these, though less
in number, speak of attitudes that need to change.
" There's always this sense of loss when you discover who you are,'' says
Aaron. An American presently settled in Delhi, she is also with Sangini. "Why
am I not like the others you keep asking yourself, and this question of identity
becomes a constant search.''
Many a time telling their parents is the biggest block. Where do you begin
to tell them how you feel, they ask. And the reactions are in a set pattern.
From denial to anger to rejection in most cases and acceptance for a lucky
few. The rest just confine themselves to a conventional marriage and live
lives that have no meaning. "It leads to cases of depression but we can't
even highlight that because then it would be construed that since we are lesbian,
we are susceptible to depression. No one really bothers about the fact that
we are human and women,'' says Depika.
Fighting a law like Section 377 under the Indian Penal Code still brands them
as deviants. In search for an identity, they gather at various psychiatry conferences
to be heard. Heard in the hope that they too have an identity in a world that
thrives in the conventional norm.
Indian
Express ( http://www.indian-express.com )
May 12, 2001
6
Film on gay lovers set to create ripples
Mumbai/Bombay - A newcomer director plans to challenge the audience with a film on homosexuality
-- a taboo subject in the tradition-bound country. Mumbai-based Shamin Desai's
debut feature film "Auroville 316" follows two gay lovers on a
long car journey after a woman hitch-hiker forces one of them to rethink
his sexual
orientation.
" It is not just about gays, but gays as a metaphor for outsiders ... people
not accepted by society," said Desai, who sees himself as an outsider
in Bollywood (Bombay/Hollywood). Desai's film -- shot in just 22 days in
the harsh,
barren landscape of Gujarat -- is a bold cinematic experiment, coming two
years after some Hindutva activists forced a film on lesbianism off theatres
across
the country.
The Hindutva activists felt the now famous film, Fire, violated the country's
traditional Hindu culture. Homosexuality is frowned upon in Indian society and
punishable under the Indian Penal Code. There are a few voluntary organisations
in the country which provide a platform for gay men and women to interact in
relative safety, but very few are open about their sexual preference. Desai's film, made with a budget of $80,000, stars Bhutanese-English model Kelly
Dorji, theatre actor Faredoon Bhujwala and Meghna Reddy.
It will
be screened at international festivals from next month and will be
released in select Indian
theatres in September. The writer-director-producer said he has entered
his production in several international film festivals like the New
York, Sundance (in Utah)
and Palm Spring festivals. The Indian movie industry is usually a steady
fare of light musicals, where the good guys wear white and beat off
the baddies to
get the girl. - (Reuters)
The
Times of India ( http://www.timesofindia.com )
July 8, 2001
7
NGO charged with running gay club
Lucknow - A non-government organisation (NGO) Naaz Foundation International and its of-shoot
Bharosa, being aided by the UP government and international agencies, were charged
of running a gay club in Lucknow under the garb of imparting HIV and AIDS awareness
programmes. The director and programme director of Naaz were arrested on charges
of propogating and indulging in unnatural sex.
Police sezied objectionable literature, sex toys, ointments, video cassettes
and photograhps from the office of Naaz, the parent unit of Bharosa, situated
in Gulzar colony on Rana Pratap Marg. The offices of the two NGOs were sealed
by the police. The arrests were following the detention of one Shahid, a resident
of Dalibagh from a den running a 'call-boy' racket at stand number 4 of Charbagh
Railway Station on Friday night.
Shahid revealed that he was working for an NGO called Bharosa which has its office
situated at Pirpura House near Ganna Sansathan. Searching the details of the
NGO on the internet as revealed by Shahid, SP (East) Rajesh Pandey discovered
that the webpage carried an open message asking men seeking men (MSM) to get
in touch with Bharosa. The webpage also carried the statement that the organisation
was working for AIDS and HIV awareness programmes. Police raided the office of
Bharosa and were escorted to the office of the parent organisation Naaz situated
at Gulzar colony.
The up-to-date office had a library, bedroom, dressing room, bathroom along with
a small basement attached to it. The accomodation was found equipped with the
most mordern luxuries including air conditioners, television sets and refridgerators.
Bundles of imported condoms, ointments, video casettes and pornographic literature
was also seized. Documents relating to memberships of another gay club called
Friends being reportedly run by a retired army officer in Indiranagar were also
sezied.
Talking to The Times of India the director of the regional liason office of Naaz,
Arif Jafar refuted charges of running a guy club. He said that the literature
seized was being used to educate the illiterate about AIDS and its prevention
and propogate use of condoms. The programme director of Naaz, Parmeshwar Nayar
was also arrested. He revealed the executive director of Naaz, D G Khan, was
presently based in London and was expected to return in July 25.
SSP B B Bakshi said that the two organisations, Naaz and Bharosa, were running
gay clubs in contrast to the Indian culture and ethics under the garb of educating
the masses about AIDS and HIV. He said that it was a well organised racket which
was collecting lakhs of rupees in aid from Indian and international agencies
but involved in spreading gay culture in the city. The accused were charged under
section 377 of the IPC (indulging in unnatural sex).
The Times of India ( http://www.timesofindia.com )
10 July 2001
8
Gay culture started in UP in '98
Lucknow - The Intelligence Bureau (IB) had, in its report, tipped-off the Government
of India way back in 1998 about the gay culture spreading its roots
in parts of Uttar Pradesh. Apart from seven cities identified by the
intelligence agencies where an organised gay movement had been noticed,
the report had even hinted of similar trends in the lesbian community.
Well placed sources said that funding of non government organisations
(NGOs) working for AIDS and HIV awareness programmes by international
agencies through Reserve Bank of India, caught the attention of the
Intelligence agencies several years ago. As a majority of the parent
organisations funding these NGOs were based in Canada and Europe, which
also has a chunk of Pakistani nationals residing there, the IB was
pressed into service to monitor the inflow of funds and their mode
of expenditure in India.
The Intelligence agencies in UP did prepare a report on the funding
of Naz Foundation International and its offshoots: Bharosa -- The Trust
and Friends India, apart from other NGOs working on similar lines and
collecting foreign aides. As the chief of Naz Foundation International,
DGM Khan is presently based in Canada, the NGO caught the special attention
of the intelligence sleuths.
When the report was being prepared, the Intelligence agencies could
not gather evidence which could corroborate that the three NGOs were
actually gay clubs. The report, however, categorically mentioned that
the NGOs were, in a subtle way, propagating gay culture as they were
only concentrating on homosexuals.
Some pamphlets of the NGOs were also sent to the Intelligence headquarters
along with comprehensive details on the manner in which the foreign
aides were being utilised by these social groups. The first report
in this regard was drafted by the Intelligence agencies in 1998 and
several other details about the NGOs have been sent to Delhi from time
to time on regular basis, sources confirm. The reports also carry names
of ex-officio members of these organisations and their role in the
programmes of the NGOs.
Little wonder then, a battery of sleuths from the IB and the state
intelligence agencies grilled the three office-bearers of Bharosa and
Naz at the Hazratganj police station for hours at a stretch before
they were produced before the court and sent to jail on Sunday. The
fresh report being prepared by the IB has reference to its earlier
reports. Sources said that a fresh report was being drafted on the
activities of the NGOs under the light of the facts brought to the
fore and it is likely to be dispatched by next week.
Wired
Magazine San Francisco, CA ( http://www.wired.com )
July 24, 2001
9
The Internet: India's Different Gay Divide
by Swaroopa Iyengar
Bangalore, India - Gay men aren't accepted in Indian society, and as a result they have been extremely
closeted. But in the last five years, the Indian gay community has moved into
and flourished on what has probably been the most accepting space they could
have ever hoped to find -- the Internet.
But in India, the Net is still an urban phenomenon, available only to those
who can afford to be connected as well as communicate in English. Now, the
more affluent meet people online and avoid the dangers associated with cruising
the streets to look for partners. But the Net is also creating new class divisions
within the gay community.
" Before the Net, everyone had to go to the common cruising areas within
every city," said Elavarthi Manohar, who works with Sangama, a sexual rights
organization based in Bangalore. "If you are gay or bisexual, you know about
these places. They are usually public toilets, parks or secluded lanes, and when
one goes looking for sexual partners there, one tends to meet people from different
socioeconomic backgrounds. You would come across servants and businessmen, so
at least some interaction across the class would happen."
But going to these "cruising areas" make gay men easy targets for
police actions. "The police frequent these places and very commonly either
rape the men they catch there or try and extort money from them, so I suppose
from that point of view meeting people online provides more immediate safety," Manohar
said.
While gay online dating does not work much differently than how it does for
heterosexuals, the anonymity it provides is of great significance in a country
where gay men usually give in to family pressures and get
married rather than choose to come out about their sexuality. "They will
then spend the rest of their lives frequenting cruising areas for sexual partners," said
Chandra Shekhar Balachandran, founder of the Dharani Trust in Bangalore. "What
they do not understand is that they are under enormous threat of contracting
STDs and AIDS, which they will probably go home and pass on to their wives.
Balachandran started KhushNet -- one of the most popular Indian gay mailing
lists while he was in the United States. "The Net does isolate groups
as far as connectivity goes," Balachandran said. "But about the language
barrier, I have noticed that just a basic familiarity with English is enough.
People tend to create their own way of talking, by typing Hindi words using
the English alphabet."
|
What Balachandran finds most interesting are the kinds of conversations that
take place on popular chat rooms such as Indiatimes.com and Datingdesis.com. "The
discussions are quite elite due to the kind of medium it is," he said. "Indians
have this thing for fair skin. So often I come across someone who says, 'I
am 24, a software engineer. But I am a little on the dark side. Is that OK?'
It is as though the whole concept of a fair girl in a heterosexual match has
been lifted and placed right into the homosexual arena."
For those who can get access, the fact that they can communicate with organizations
across the globe has played a vital role in helping them shape and manage fledgling
nonprofits here in India. Vinay Chandran started Swabhava in 1999 to provide
online, telephone and personal counseling to sexual minorities. He is slowly
mobilizing resources and networking with similar organizations in India to
repeal Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code that criminalizes sodomy.
" People like to believe that no one around here has sex, they just make
babies. So, gays are not even given any sort of consideration," Chandran
said. "But the Net has helped us bring about some sort of change. Like when
I go to a debate about gay rights, there is so much more information available
now that it gives us an idea of the bigger picture -- about what groups in the
West are lobbying for, and on what they are basing their arguments."
Chandran works within tight parameters. The Indian police recently arrested
two men in a "cruising area" in the northern city of Lucknow, and
Chandran is concerned that cops in other cities might begin to bear down upon
gay organizations. "They might just come in here and shut me down for
what they consider possession of pornographic material -- though it might just
be some gay literature," he said. "And once people hear that our
offices were raided, even if we do clear stuff up, they will always be hesitant
in approaching us for any sort of counseling. Just to be safe, I have boxed
up all my copies of Bombay-Dost (India's first magazine for the gay community)." For
us in India, it is just the beginning. And it has been such a tough journey," said
Chandran.
Some gay India on-line mailing list addresses:
gayindia-subscribe@egroups.com
gaybombay-subscribe@egroups.com (most active)
gaydelhi-subscribe@egroups.com
gaycalcutta-subscribe@egroups.com
gaychennai-subscribe@egroups.com
gaybangalore-subscribe@egroups.com
gaycochin-subscribe@egroups.com
gaygoa-subscribe@egroups.com
gayhyderabad-subscribe@egroups.com
gaypune-subscribe@egroups.com
The Times of India, Mumbai (Bombay) ( http://www.timesofindia.com
)
July 2001
10
Respect rights of gays, lesbians: NGOs
Pune - Amnesty International's drive to uphold the rights of gays and lesbians
was effectively introduced to a rural audience here on Monday on
the eve of the "international day in support of victims of torture".
The fact that this emotionally-charged meet urging for tolerance
and non-violence was held near the samadhi of Kasturba Gandhi in
the Aga
Khan Palace premises added a special significance to the meet.
The gathering lit candles and observed a minute's silence to solemnly
remember those unfortunate souls who suffered torture of various
kinds. While June 26 is observed by Amnesty International as the "international
day in support of victims of torture," this year the focus is
on the torture of gays, lesbians and transgender persons.
Organised on the eve of the international occasion by Masum (Mahila
Sarvangeen Utkarsh Mandal), Olava (Organised Lesbian Alliance for
Visibility and Acceptance) and Pune-based Friends of Victims of Torture,
the meet
comprised of a day-long workshop on identifying signs of torture,
a poster exhibition and a function to release Amnesty International's
book, "Crimes of hate, conspiracy of silence, torture and ill-treatment
based on sexual identity."
The harassment and ill-treatment of women through gender bias, domestic
violence and the right to dignity of homosexuals and transgender persons
were discussed at the meet. Noted legal luminary Prof. Satyaranjan
Sathe, well-known political scientist and human rights advocate Prof
Ram Bapat, Masum co-convener Manisha Gupte and Chatura of Olava were
among those who spoke at the function. The speakers who were addressing
grassroots rural workers belonging to Masum and other non-governmental
organisations explained the differences in sexual orientation and the
right of homosexuals and transgender persons to human dignity.
"
Being gay was earlier considered to be a disease, a mental aberration
or a form of sexual perversity. It has, however, been conclusively
proved that there is nothing unnatural about people with different
sexual orientations. They have as much a right to human dignity as
any one else," Masum co-convener Manisha Gupte said. Prof. Bapat
who released the book "Crimes of hate, conspiracy of silence,
torture and ill-treatment based on sexual identity," called
for the adoption of Amnesty International's 12-point program to bring
an
end to the inhuman practice of torture.
The program
urges governments to repeal laws criminalising homosexuality, condemn
torture irrespective
of the victim, provide safeguards in custody, prohibit forced medical
treatment, protect gays, lesbians and others against violence in
the community and protect refugees fleeing torture based on sexual
identity.
Amnesty International has also urged governments to support gay
and lesbian human rights defendents, strengthen their international
protection
and combat discrimination.
The Times
of India, Mumbai (Bombay) ( http://www.timesofindia.com )
December 18, 2001
11
A gay rights/heath group in New Delhi is challenging the Indian government's
classification of gay sex as a criminal offence.
According to the London-based
Naz Foundation which promotes sexual health among MSM (men who have
sex with men) in South Asia has filed a petition with New Delhi's high
court seeking to exclude gay sex from Section 377 of the Indian Penal
Code. India as well as other former British colonies including Singapore
and Malaysia have almost similarly worded Section 377, that reads: "Whoever
voluntarily has carnal intercourse against the order of nature with
any man, woman, or animal shall be punished with imprisonment for
life or with imprisonment of either description for a term which
may extend
to 10 years and shall also be liable to fine."
The foundation argues that the penal code provision not only violates
the right to life and liberty as outlined in the Indian constitution
but also impedes the effective control of AIDS.
They reason that consensual adult sexual relations in private fall
within the classification of intimate associations protected from government
intrusion under Article 21 of the Indian constitution.
In its petition the group asserts that Section 377 is discriminatory
because it criminalises predominantly homosexual acts and imposes
traditional gender stereotypes of "natural" sexual roles
for men and women upon sexual minorities. In effect, the foundation
says, Section
377 provides moral and legal sanction for the continued social discrimination
of sexuality minorities. The foundation, which runs a regional liason office in Lucknow, India
has been active in advocating gay rights and providing HIV/AIDS support
and education in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and SriLanka
which represents 20 per cent of the world’s population.
Gay rights activists who have long campaigned against Section 377
have called it "archaic law passed under the colonial government".
Section 377 was enacted by the British in 1862 and has been repealed
in England in 1967.
Naz Foundation (India) has been awarded the 2001 Commonwealth Award
for Action on HIV/AIDS for outstanding 'Prevention' work related to
the HIV/AIDS epidemic. |