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1
Inca flag and gay pride clash in Peruvian Andes 8/00
2
Peruvians march in first gay pride parade 7/02
3
Catholic University in Peru angers students by handing out pamphlet
calling homosexuality an illness 9/03
4
Peru prime minister fired over rumors 12/03
4a Peru
OKs gay sex in the military 11/04
5 The
First Rainbow Nation--Peru 3/05 (Travel
story from Passport Magazine)
6
EXITOSA JORNADA SOLIDARIA CON COMPAÑERAS TRAVESTIS 6/05
(SUCCESSFUL
SUPPORTIVE DAY WITH TRANSVESTITE COMPANIONS--in Spanish)
7 Police
Attack Transvestite in Lima 3/06
8
New Incidents of Police Brutality Against Lesbians 10/06
9 New
Anti-Gay Crackdown in Peru 10/06
10 Gay Couple Tie the Knot in Peru's First Same-Sex Wedding 12/06
11 ILGA's
4th conference in Latin America and the Caribbean, Lima
20 – 23 September 2007
12 Strong
Earthquake Strikes Peru, Over Five Hundred Dead 8/07 (3 stories)
13 Peru urged to protect LGBT youth 12/07
14 New Populations at High Risk of HIV/STIs in Low-income, Urban Coastal Peru 12/07
Reuters
August
15, 2000
1
Inca flag and gay pride clash in Peruvian Andes
Lima - "Any resemblance to gay pride is unintentional.''
The deeply Roman Catholic and conservative Peruvians living in the former
capital of the Inca Empire would probably not complain if that disclaimer
was engraved in stone above the arrivals terminal of their airport nestled
high in the Andes.
Cusco's mainly Indian people are a proud lot, still speaking the language
of the Incas whose history of lost cities, gold treasures and heroic
battles attract millions of dollars in much needed tourism to this poor
South American nation.
But many residents are red-faced over reports that tourists who flock
to the town are mistaking their much-loved Inca flag -- a feast of rainbow
colors -- for the internationally known banner that flies high in gay
pride marches and festivals.
So much so that municipal authorities, who normally slap a fine on inhabitants
who forget to fly the banner from their homes, are debating whether
to change the flag's design. "Many foreign visitors come her and
feel a little confused at our flag. They stare at it, wondering,'' said
Mayor Carlos Valencia, whose municipal building flies the flag year
round.
In June and July -- the tourist high season -- Cusco residents raise
the banner from their houses to mark both national independence holidays
and traditional Inca religious ''Sun God'' celebrations. Even the 17th
century Roman Catholic cathedral, built by conquering Spaniards over
old Inca foundations, must fly the flag or face an $83 fine.
STRIKINGLY SIMILAR TO GAY PRIDE FLAG
The flag, with seven horizontal strips of colors moving from red at
the top through yellow and green in the middle to violet at the bottom,
is striking similar to the gay pride flag. The only real difference
is a light blue strip in the Cusco banner.
Each year, hundreds of thousands of tourists visit Cusco, a small town
of red-tiled houses and cobbled streets nestled in an Andean valley
that is the gateway to nearby Machu Picchu, an Inca citadel known as "The Lost City of the Incas.'' Peruvians are immensely proud of
Cusco, which was the capital of an empire spanning most of the Andes
along South America's western coast at the time of the Spanish conquest
in the early 16th century.
Tourists' dollars are welcome in one of Peru's poorest regions, but
local inhabitants have long distrusted the influence of the modern nightclubs
and bars on a town where sexual freedoms are frowned upon. Historians
say the flag has little to do with the Incas. It surfaced in the early
1970s to mark a local fiesta and became Cusco's official banner only
in 1978, rooted in the Inca symbol of the rainbow as a link to the gods
of water and lightning.
By coincidence, that same year U.S. artist Gilbert Baker designed a
gay pride flag inspired by the colors of the rainbow that is now known
as an emblem of the homosexual community.
MISTAKEN IDENTITIES
The two flags' similarity was first noticed by Cusco municipal officials
when a delegation of local artists traveled to France for a festival
of native cultures. "The artists took the Cusco flag with them,
and they were sent to march with the gays. This should not be repeated,''
Gustavo Infantas, a member of the municipal council, said.
For Peru's small gay rights group, the conflict is a symptom of homosexual
issues being largely buried in a country still struggling to forge a
modern democracy, and where civil rights often take second place to
questions of where Peruvians will get their next plate of food. "It
encourages homophobia,'' Jose Ascencio, coordinator of Lima's homosexual
movement, told Reuters.
"It's a stupidity of the people of Cusco,'' said well-known economist
Oscar Ugarteche, one of the few Peruvian public figures who is openly
gay. "This flag is a way of attracting more tourists.'' But some
Peruvians are calling for a change in the flag, if for no reason but
straightforward, free market common sense. "If the logo of Coca
Cola was like Pepsi's, one would have to be changed,'' artist Sandra
Gamarra told Somos magazine. "The flag is an icon and icons should
not generate confusion.''
Associated
Press
http://europe.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/americas/07/07/peru.gaypride.ap/index.htm
July 7,
2002
2
Peruvians march in first gay pride parade
Lima, Peru - In conservative
and predominantly Catholic Peru,Robby Bernaola decided to dress as a
butterfly to march in the country'sfirst gay pride parade. "They
usually brand us 'goats' or 'butterflies,"' said Bernaola,6-foot-2
inches (188 centimeters) in white mesh sequined wings and a skirtand
top made of light blue stuffed animal fur with matching headband andpipe
cleaner antennae. "I prefer to be a butterfly," the 16-year-old
said. "This is achance to show the public that we are people, too."
But not
everyone marching on Saturday was comfortable with coming toofar out
in the open in one of Latin America's more conservative,predominantly
Roman Catholic capitals. Unlike in Paris, where the mayor ledan estimated
500,000 marchers on the same day, just a few hundred showed upfor Lima's
parade. Holding a placard that read "we want to be visible, but
intolerancesuppresses us," one woman joined several dozen others
in Spiderman andfeathered party masks that covered their faces down
to the mouth.
"I
am sure that if I marched without this mask, come Monday I would show
up for work without a job," said Rosa, 33, who declined to give
her last name for fear of persecution. Marching to pop tunes of Madonna
and Cher, some carried banners calling for constitutional protection
of Peru's gays. "It's noticeable that lots of people in the parade
are scared and concerned," said Larry LaFontain, a professor
of Puerto Rican and CaribbeanStudies at Rutgers University in the
United States. "I have friends who are not openly gay and are uncomfortable
with being here." LaFountain said he was surprised that several
hundred did show up for the march.
The
Chronicle of Higher Education, Washington, D.C. ( http://chronicle.com>http://chronicle.com
)
<http://chronicle.com/daily/2002/09/2002091906n.htm>http://chronicle.com/daily/2002/09/2002091906n.htm
September
19, 2002
3
Catholic University in Peru angers students by handing out pamphlet
calling homosexuality an illness
by Lucien Chauvin
Lima, Peru - Students
are enraged at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru for distributing
a pamphlet that says that homosexuality is an illness and can be cured.
The pamphlet ö titled "Sexual Identity: Is It Possible to Choose?"
ö also says that in difficult cases, when a person refuses to change
his or her sexual orientation, celibacy is the only healthy option.
The document was handed out to students as they arrived at the university
this month. The pamphlet also questions gender theory, saying it has
served as a tool "for the political manipulation of international
organizations" and has little to do with women.
In an introductory note, Salomón Lerner Febres, rector of the
university, says the document was prepared at the request of the university's
chancellor, Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani, the archbishop of Lima.
The document has set off a firestorm of protest among students, who
say the university is losing its independence to reactionary forces
within the Roman Catholic Church. The Catholic University Student
Federation condemned the document, saying it violated "individual
liberties and personal dignity."
The federation demanded to know whether the document reflected official
university policy and took the opportunity to question Cardinal Cipriani,
publishing its own document, titled "Catholic University According
to Cipriani," which questions his opinions on homosexuality, human
rights, and the fight against government corruption.
Cardinal Cipriani has long been a controversial figure in Peru. He had
a close relationship with Alberto Fujimori, the former president who
was impeached two years ago after fleeing to Japan to escape a burgeoning
corruption scandal.
The student federation says Cardinal Cipriani represents the most
reactionary forces within the Catholic Church and "has expressed
objectionable opinions throughout his public life, such as his disdain
for human rights."
A spokesman for the rector's office, who asked not be named, said the
pamphlet was distributed at Cardinal Cipriani's request and was
a response to other documents published by the university's counseling
center. Those documents, which did not list homosexuality as an aberration,
have been removed from the center.
"This new document is certainly pre-Vatican II, but it was imposed.
Worse than the content is the lack of dialogue between the university
and the archbishop's office," the spokesman said.
Two third-year students, Rodrigo Vecco and Bernardo Nieuwland, said
the pamphlet is the latest in a series of steps to keep homosexuality
out of the public eye at the university.
The two men founded a gay-student group, Parenthesis Collective,
a few months back, but have been refused permission by the university
to use meeting rooms, hang posters, or post notices on student bulletin
boards.
Mr. Vecco said he does not think the university will expel them for
being gay, but he does think administrators are watching them more closely
than other students.
While the university spokesman denied that the institution discriminates
against homosexuals, Mr. Nieuwland said that the administration has
refused to answer written requests asking why the group cannot get
permission
for events.
Gay.com
http://www.gay.com/news/article.html?2003/12/17/4
December
17, 2003
4
Peru
prime minister fired over rumors
by Gay.com
U.K.
The
prime minister of Peru was fired last week after rumors regarding
her sexuality reached the country's Parliament and media.
President
Alejandro Toledo dismissed Beatriz Merino, the country's
first female prime minister,
because he was worried the lesbian rumors would cast
doubt
over her political life.
But Merino
claims the rumors were spread by
a
rival
who wanted her out of office. "Eight weeks ago I was informed
by several sources that people were preparing a series of attacks
aiming to damage my personal reputation," Merino told
reporters on Monday.
She refused
to comment on the rumors directly, or her
future career.
Homosexuality,
particularly lesbianism, is still taboo in Peru's society,
which holds strong ties with Catholicism
and conservative
values. Merino has denied she is a lesbian, but
the very fact
she is the center of such a scandal has reportedly
led to Toledo losing
faith in her abilities to manage the country. The
president, who is set to choose a new prime minister in the coming
weeks,
also fired
her complete cabinet.
International News #552 by Rex Wockner members.aol.com/wockner
November 22, 2004
4a
Peru
OKs gay sex in the military
Peru's
Constitutional Court Nov. 11 overturned a law that prohibited gays
in the military from having sex, the Agence
France-Presse news
wire reported. The army had banned same-sex relations on or off military
bases under threat of imprisonment or expulsion. The court said the
ban was "completely discriminatory" and unconstitutional.
Passport
magazine
March 2005
5
The First
Rainbow Nation--Peru (Travel story)
by Bill Strubbe
After a long climb up the stone walkway and a photo op with a couple
of llamas, I lay back on the lush grass of a stone terrace to take
in all this beauty. Moment to moment the stunning view is an ever-shifting
kaleidoscope of clouds and light; veils of mist envelop the jutting
peaks and then, at next glance, brilliant sunlight breaks through
and dapples the verdant slopes. This magical and mystical place seems
almost
alive. I've traveled the world over, and Machu Picchu ranks tops
on my list among the most spiritual and amazing places. If one were
to
travel to Peru only to spend a day or two in this heaven of the Incas
it would be worth all the time, effort, and money. Of course, no
one would be so foolish to come just for that as Lima, Cusco, and the
rest
of Peru offer enough natural beauty, history, and culture to keep
a traveler busy for a week or two.
CITY OF KINGS: LIMA One of the great pluses of traveling to South
America is the minimal time zone change. New York is on the same
time meridian
as Lima; California a mere three hours off, and that is a lag I can
live with. Waking up in Lima that first morning I was fresh and perky,
ready to embark on a city tour with Abercrombie & Kent's top guide,
Juan Lazo. First stop was the Plaza de Armas, the center of this Spanish
Colonial outpost. The original city (La Ciudad de [os Reyes or "The
City of Kings") was founded on January 5, 1535, the eve of the
Epiphany of the Magi by the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro.
Though none of the original buildings remain, the oldest element
is the central bronze fountain dating from 1650. The balconied facade
of the Archbishop's palace to the left of the Cathedral is an exquisite
example of one of Lima's distinctive architectural features. The
latticed balconies carved from wood are of Moorish design influence,
and many
of the old buildings boasted of them.
One can't help but notice the huge rainbow flag waving in the breeze
above the Governor's Palace across the plaza from the Cathedral. Juan
explained that the rainbow was the symbol of the Tahuantinsuyo, the
Inca Empire. We snapped the obligatory picture of the handsomely uniformed
guard in front of the palace (Changing of the guard is at noon). Next
site was the San Francisco Church and Monastery, built in 1687, and
reconstructed after earthquakes in 1746 and 1970. While its two-tier
cloister, vast library, and collection of fine paintings and frescoes
are impressive, it's the catacombs that really capture the imagination.
Discovered in 1943, an estimated 70,000 bodies were laid to rest in
the brick and mortar crypts. If you're squeamish, bones and skulls
abound, and in one .morbid ossuary display, hundreds of bones and skulls
have been artfully arranged in a circular pit.
As we traversed the city I noticed that nary a bit of garbage or trash
blemished the streets. Granted, we stuck to thoroughfares and bypassed
the numerous outlying slums, but when I later ventured out on my own
through side streets, they too were remarkably clean.
Despite
warnings about crime and pickpockets (there's 10 percent unemployment
and 53
percent underemployment) both times that day when I left my wallet
in a craft stall and then in a store, someone found me among the
crowd to return it. There are numerous churches and museums to visit,
so
pick judiciously. We skipped the controversial Gold Museum (apparently
some artifacts are replicas). Instead we visited the Rafael Larco
Herrera Museum which, besides plenty of gold to dazzle and lush fabrics
created
from feathers, contains the most fascinating collection of ceramic
figurines from the Chimu (black clay) and Moche (red clay) civilization
that preceded the Incas. The glass display cases are crammed with
thousands of these hollow vessels depicting every conceivable aspect
of daily
life; animals, plants, miniature homes, farming and cooking implements,
pots of cooked dishes, and people of every sort; slaves, healers,
children, warriors, and people with deformities and illnesses.
Most remarkable is that every face is distinctive-one laughing,
one sad, one angry, another with woeful eyes-as though each were
modeled
after a particular individual. The exact purpose of the vessels
is unclear, but it's suspected they might have contained chicha
and coca
leaves for making ritual offerings to Pacha Mama, Mother Earth.
Across the garden, we were led to the XXX-rated exhibit: a collection
of pre-Columbian
ceramics explicitly depicting just about every conceivable sexual
practice known to humankind: standard missionary positions and
doggie style,
doing it upside down, chummy three-ways, fellatio and cunnilingus,
even acts with animals.
One of Abercrombie & Kent's special touches are arrangements
made to visit private homes. Our second evening we were welcomed
at Casa
Garcia-Alvarado by owner Mrs. Ana Maria Garcia whose ancestors
are traced to the colonial period. When this impressive home was built
in 1912 (remodeled in 1932) Lima's upper class had begun moving
away
it fom the old downtown to Miraflores, the first residential district.
Ana Maria, whose aristocratic manner belies a formal old-world
upbringing, began the tour in the Grand Salon, the centerpiece a magnificently
carved wooden fireplace decorated with Limoges, Severes, and antique
Dresden porcelain.
Ana Maria recalled that until the 1950's, as was the old Lima custom,
the Grand Salon was open on Wednesdays between 4 and 6 for mends
to drop in for an English high tea.
The tour
moved through the Music Room
and Portrait Gallery, into the Stained Glass Parlor, done in
the style of Louis xv. Wherever one's gaze settled there was a Tiffany
lamp,
Lalique crystal, a Venetian mirror, or a lovely silver tea set
Tom Camusso, one of Peru's most famous silverworks. We trailed
though the
peculiarly interconnected bedrooms, and then out to the terrace
and grand courtyard garden decorated with exquisite tiles from
the Ramos
Rejano factory in Seville.
That evening for dinner we enjoyed a five-course meal at an elegant
mahogany table with full silver and crystal service. While the
food was not remarkable, Ana Maria regaled us with memories and
tales of
her family, childhood, and travels across the globe. By evening's
end I felt I'd encountered a living piece of Peru's upper class
history.
When venturing out on your own for dinner you may want to try
EI Senorio de Sulco, which is considered by many to be the best
restaurant
in
Miraflores. Sample their traditional Peruvian dishes like sopa
a la Criolla, noodle soup with beef, egg, and veggies; palta
a la Reyna,
avocado stuffed with chicken salad; and lomo saltada, chopped
steak fried with onions, tomatoes, and potatoes.
One of the most romantic places to enjoy seafood in Lima is at
La Rosa Nautica at the end of the pier in Miraflores. Dine on
lobster and shrimp
while watching the surfers in the distance. A la carte meals
get pricey, but the set menus, including a Pisco Sour and wine,
are
affordable.
My home away from home was Miraflores Park Hotel, recently bought
and upgraded by Orient-Express Hotels, and located in Lima's
most fashionable
commercial and residential area. The contemporary building, with
marble and granite bathrooms and the latest internet connections,
is surrounded
by parkland and west rooms have exceptional views of the Pacific
Ocean. When the ocean breezes were optimal, hang gliders soared
like birds
above the ocean cliffs. A couple mornings I took advantage of
the modest swimming pool and gym atop the building. As do many
of the
local residents,
in the evening I took a stroll along the cliff-top walkway to
the bustling mall. It seemed all of Lima was there; families
with multiple
children,
young couples in love, older folks, and young gay men who smiled
when I passed. For those needing to watch the wallet, Hostal
EI Patio is
an economical option. This gay-friendly hotel, located in the
heart of Miraflores with discos, bars, and shopping all within
a short
walk, offers kitchen privileges as well as suites with kitchenettes.
For a city of eight million people, Lima should have a booming
gay scene, but is outdone by Buenos Aires, Sao Paulo, Rio de
Janeiro, Bogota,
and Santiago. Although attitudes have lightened up a bit, in
this conservative Catholic and macho culture, homosexuality is
still
generally viewed
in a dim light. Keeping a low profile in public is the wisest
course of action. As in all Latin American cities, the nightlife
doesn't
get swinging until after midnight, with early birds usually getting
in
free or at reduced rates. One of my nights in Lima happened to
be a Saturday, so I hailed a taxi to check out a few gay night
spots. I
stopped in at La Sede in Miraflores, a very popular gay- and
lesbian-friendly bar with a dance floor featuring a music mix
of 80's and Latino
pop.
I was a bit early, but was assured that in an hour or two it
would be packed. Just a few blocks up the street is the Oupen
Sauna,
a clean and well-maintained
establishment with all basic amenities one would expect: two steam rooms,
sauna, private rooms, a small gym, male masseurs, a cafeteria,
and bar. Unlike in the
USA it's not a late night place; it opens at 2 P.M. and closes at 11 P.M.,
with Wednesday through Saturday after 6 P.M. the busiest. I took
another cab (walking
around Miraflores seemed safe enough, but for longer distances take cabs)
to the Minotauro Club. The club is a former private residence
with a slew of rooms
offering varied activities. In addition to the dance floor and bar, there's
a quiet lounge for intimate conversation, a cafe, an outside
patio, an internet
room where guys busily clicked away, a porn video room, and a popular and
busy dark room. Both of the hosts, Julio and Juan, speak English,
and it seemed like
an excellent place for a foreign visitor to hang out and meet a new mend.
Apparently, but not surprising, there are no exclusively lesbian
bars or social venues in
Lima. The gay disco Avenida 13 offers a women only disco on Friday nights
that is very popular. La Sede bar and the gay discos DownTown
Vale Todo or La Cueva
are happy to have the gals show up.
INCA
CENTRAL: CUSCO
Cusco was once the powerful capital of the Inca Empire and
is the longest continually
inhabited city in South
America. When walking the streets, plainly visible are the mammoth Inca
stone
walls forming the foundations of more modern buildings. While several
major earthquakes toppled these later constructions, the ingeniously
built Inca walls remained
unscathed. From the time Spaniard Pizarro conquered Cusco in 1533, until
the discovery of Machu Picchu in 1911 and the development of
modern tourism, Cusco
remained a provincial backwater.
Today, however, Cusco is one of South America's most popular tourist
destinations and thousands of travelers from around the world converge
here to experience
the vestiges of the Inca empire in the form of the Quechua-speaking descendents
of the Incas.
While numerous hotels and inns in Cusco offer some semblance of old-world
charm and comfort, if you can afford it there's only one great place
to stay, the five star
Monasterio Hotel. The 127-room hotel occupies a restored Spanish monastery
built in 1592 on the site of the Inca Amaru Qhala Palace. Four original
16th-century cloisters surround the central courtyard whose centerpiece
is a fountain
shaded
by a 400-year-old cedar tree. Though the last monks moved elsewhere in
the 1960's, 300 years of their presence still haunts the cloisters and
recorded
Gregorian
chants waft through the hallways. Each uniquely configured room (greatly
expanded former monks' cells) seems to have been spectacularly made over
by an ecclesiastical
Fab Five: carved wooden chests, colonial antiques, lush fabrics, gilded
mirrors, and hand-stenciled window frames.
I was in heaven when I opened my door and stepped out onto a small balcony
overlooking a second inner cloister. Like myself, about 50 percent of
visitors feel the deleterious
effects of high altitude: shortness of breath, headaches, nausea, and
poor sleep. Coca leaf tea, available in the lobby, is beneficial in relieving
high altitude
sickness, and several times I took advantage of the "oxygen station" near
the front desk. Hotel Monasterio is also the world's first hotel to offer
supplemental oxygen through a central air system. Raising the oxygen
level in the rooms
from 21 to 24 percent ensures a better night sleep, and more energy for
the following
day. In many of the city's hotels, from budget to deluxe, you can expect
periodic shortages of hot water, and rooms on the street side will be
noisy. At the
Hotel Libertador, however, a 16th-century mansion with Inca foundations
surrounding a lovely courtyard, hot water and central heating is assured.
The stunning
lobby
and sitting rooms are furnished with ornate colonial antique chandeliers,
and paintings for travelers who appreciate their ar a more utilitarian
setting
than a museum.
The heart of Cusco is the lovely Plaza de Armas, the central square superimposed
by the Spanish over the II Huacaypata that was twice as large and covered
with sand. The large Cathedral is actually a co-joined complex of the
churches constructed
over the centuries. Inside is a whole universe unto itself with many
highlights. Of special note is the crypt Containing the important Inca
historian
Garacilaso de la Vega; exquisitely carved choir opposite the silver altar;
the large
paint! of the 1650 earthquake; and numerous side chapels containing silver
trolleys
that haul the larger-than-life-size religious stat! during numerous annual
feast days.
Though we missed out, by accounts they are brilliant displays of a synthesis
of pagan a Catholic ritual and mayhem. Late in the afternoon we paid
homage to the impressive ruins Sacsayhuaman (pronounced "sexy woman")
in the hills overlooking the red-tiled roofs of Cusco and the lush countryside.
A testimonial
to the impressive Incan architectural skills, the three-tier zigzag walls
of
the fortress are constructed of massive stones (one weighing 300 tons!)
fitted together
so precisely that one is unable to insert a piece of paper in the cracks
between the blocks. This ancient fortress was the site of the greatest
battle between
the Spanish a Incas in 1536. With the sun's lengthening rays casting
a rose glow, we also visited nearby Qenqo an Incan shrine thought to
be dedicated
to the
Earth Mother. Beneath a huge boulder covered with carvings--including
a zigzagging channel thought to have been used for the ritual sacrifice
of blood --is a
labyrinth leading to a mysterious cave with altars carved into the rock.
A minute's walk up a cobbled street from my hotel is a bustling restaurant/bar
called Moncondo. I ask to see the owner, Andre, and his mother smiles
from the kitchen and tells me he is at the Fallen Angel, his new and
even more
fabulous
homo offering to Cusco. The club, illuminated with a blue light, is catty-corner
across the square from the Hotel Monasterio. Inside the decor is as hip
and happening as any place in Europe or the USA. Young couples, both
gay and
straight, lounge
on wrought iron day beds covered with velvet and satin pillows under
brilliant murals. The tables are ingenious: illuminated, glass-covered,
claw-foot
bath tubs swimming. with fish. In the courtyard shimmers a huge and spectacular
angel made of plexiglass and metal.
Back in the bar, I find Andre Zuniga hanging out with a couple of friends,
both of whom are straight, but later had no qualms about being photographed
for a
gay magazine. Andre took a few minutes out of his evening to tell me
his story. The oldest child of five, at age 15 and feeling constricted
by a
rigorous Catholic
school, he ran away to Europe where he quickly discovered he was gay.
Though he loved traveling the world, he eventually returned home to Cusco
and
did the unthinkable: he came out and essentially became the face for
gays in
town. After
the initial shock of family and friends, they got over it. All his family
works in the clubs, and he's put all his siblings through school. Fallen
Angel hosts
huge annual bashes on Halloween and New Year's, and guests must sport
wings.
The next morning we board the bus for the beautiful Urubamba Valley (locally
known as the Sacred Valley) about ten miles north of Cusco. We visit
the fortress of Ollantaytambo, a formidable stone structure of massive
terraces
rising to
the top of a peak, and the site of the Incas' greatest victory against
the Spanish during the wars of conquest. Constructed of rose-colored
granite, this huge installation
was once a thriving complex of baths, temples, and military barracks.
Below the fortress lies a complete Incan town, also called Ollantaytambo,
still
inhabited
and with its original architecture and layout preserved.
In Peru, you don't have to GO shopping because shopping will find you;
locals continually approach and press their wares upon you. When the
train stops,
women push goods through the windows and if you want something you toss
the money out.
The village of Pisac, known for its famous colorful market, is an excellent
place to buy souvenirs. This bustling market attracts tourists from all
over the world
bartering for local sweaters, ponchos, wall hangings, jewelry, and goods.
I couldn't resist buying for my two nieces a couple of dolls dressed
in brilliant Quechua
fabrics carrying little llamas, pan-pipes, and babies of their own.
After an elegant buffet lunch at the Huayoccari Hacienda with its incredible
view of the Sacred Valley, we stop at Seminario Ceramic Studios (corner
of Zavala & Mariscal
Castilla in Urubamba). The tranquil courtyard and building are as beautiful
as the hand-crafted art and ceramic creations inside. Since 1980, Pablo
and Marilu
Behar have researched and employed techniques and designs from ancient
Peruvian cultures. Unwilling to carry home one of the wonderful plates,
bowls, or vases,
I bought a small wooden box set with hand painted tiles, and a selection
of loose tiles for my bathroom.
Heaven's Gate: Machu Picchu
I entirely disapprove of rising before dawn, but since I was staying
at a former monastery it seemed fitting that at the hour of prime (morning
prayer
to you
novices) we were summoned from sleep for our journey to Machu Picchu
aboard
the newly inaugurated Orient Express Hiram Bingham. The train consists
of two dining
cars, a lounge car, and bar car with semi-open observation deck decorated
in an elegant 1920's Pullman-era style.
Passengers are offered a sumptuous brunch to enjoy while traveling across
the spectacular scenery of mountain passes and river gorges.
Three and-a-half hours later we arrived at Aguas Calientes, the village
at the base of Machu Picchu. Here we visited the Machu Picchu Pueblo
Hotel with
30 lovely
bungalows set amidst ten acres bejeweled with some 375 orchid varieties.
At this altitude of about 9,000 feet, over 11,000 species grow in the
region. There are
huge, yellow ones with pendulous petals; a pink and orange variety which
is the symbol of Machu Picchu; and the mosquito orchids, looking like
tiny confections
of crystallized sugar that are pollinated by wasps, and can only be fully
appreciated through a magnifying glass.
We soon boarded a van for the treacherous switchback drive up the mountain
to the Sanctuary Lodge, the only hotel permitted near the entrance to
Machu Picchu.
Simple, comfortable, and eco10gicallymendly, the 31-room lodge is set
amongst gardens overlooking the ruins, the magnificent surrounding peaks,
and the
Urubamba River in the valley far below. As Juan guided us along terraces,
up steps, and
through the remains of homes and temples, he explained that Machu Picchu,
which was never discovered by the Spaniards, was only known to a few
local Quechua
farmers when American historian Hiram Bingham stumbled upon it in 1911
while searching for the lost city and last Inca stronghold of Vilcabamba.
Though knowledge of Machu Picchu remains sketchy, from the number of
ceremonial sites and high quality stonework it was likely an important
spiritual center
to the Incas. Because of its remote locale and high elevation, the number
of visitors is self-limiting and the site manages to retain an air of
mystery and
grandeur. Leveraging its unique setting near the ruins, as guests of
the lodge our group was escorted into the ruins by Paccao, a local female
Shaman
(a healer),
for a mystical nighttime visit. Caution is required to navigate the steep
steps in moonlight, and we settled into one of the reconstructed thatch
homes as the
Shaman described some of the religious and spiritual beliefs of the Incas.
Following that, Paccao commenced an hour-long "payment to the earth ceremony," which
is still practiced by the local people in hopes of a good harvest and prosperous
life. The next morning we were on our own. I opted out of hoofing it up to
the Inti Punku, or the Sun Gate Keyhole (more vigorous visitors hike the four-day
trek to Machu Picchu on the Inca Trail entering through the Sun Gate) and instead
decided I'd attempt the 45-minute hike up the steep, but well-maintained trail
to Huayna Picchu which offers a bird's eye view of the ruins. Part way up,
as
the mist suddenly enveloped me I realized there was slim chance that I'd see
anything once at the top. I retraced my steps and happily wandered the ruins
imagining the lives of the priests, craftsmen, and servants who once inhabited
this seemingly uninhabitable citadel. After a photo opportunity with a couple
of llamas, I lay back on the lush grass of an upper stone terrace to take in
the amazing magic of the place... and it seems the narration is back where
I began, at one of the world's must-sees for those who've seen it all.
Resources
When calling from the U.S., dial 011-51 before all numbers unless
otherwise indicated.
GETTING THERE Abercrombie & Kent, Tel: 800-323-7308. Group travel and individual
itineraries to Peru and around the world. A & K is renowned for their attention
to detail, the finest guides, and special access to private homes. www.abercrombiekent.com
Lan Chile Airlines, Tel: 866-LANCHILE. Lan Chile offers daily flights
from Miami, New York, and Los Angeles to Chile, Peru, and Ecuador.
Their Business
Class is
classy, and even Economy Class offers movies and video-on-demand. Frequent
Flyer miles can be accumulated in American Airlines Aadvantage program.
www.lan.com
Or you
can book your own flights via websites such as www.Travelocity.com Take
good guidebook such as Lonely PLanet and go off on your own pace
and interests.
ACCOMMODATIONS
Hostal EI Patio, Diez Canseco 341-A, Miraflores, Lima.
Tel: 444-2107. Double $35. Kitchen available for use by guests. Suites
with
kitchenette-$40. www.andix.com/hostalelpatio/
Hotel Libertador, San Agustin 400, Cusco. Tel: 223-1961. $60 to $130.
Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel, Aguas Calientes. Tel: 220-803. $100 to $140.
www.inkaterra.com.pe
Machu Picchu Sanctuary Lodge, Machu Picchu. Tel: 421-1039. $300 and
up.
Miraflores Park Hotel, Av. Malecon de la Reserva 1035, Miraflores,
Lima. Tel: 242-3000. Rooms $270 and up.
Hotel Monasterio, Calle Palacios 136, Cusco. Tel: 241-777. $240 and
up. www.monasterio.orient-express.com
DINING
Cebicheria Don Beta, Jose Galvez 667, Miraflores, Lima. Tel:
446-9465.
L 'Eau Vive, Ucayali 370, Lima. Tel: 427-5712.
La Rosa Nautica, Espignon No 4 Costa Verde, Miraflores, Lima. Tel:
447-0149.
EI Senorio de Sulco, Malecon Cisneros 1470, Miraflores, Lima. Tel:
441-0183.
Witches Garden, Carmen Bajo 169, San Bias, Cusco. Tel: (084) 24-2175.
Gay-owned restaurant serving Peruvian and International cuisine.
GAY VENUES IN LIMA
Avenida 13, Manuel Segura 270, Lince (off block 15 of Av.
Arequipa), Lima. Tel: 265-3694. Open daily. Women-only on Friday.
Banos 240, Jiron Tarma 240, Centro (located off block 15 of Jiron Washington),
Lima. Tel: 332-4370. Sauna, open daily. There is a Finnish room,
two Turkish rooms, bar, TV room, porno video room, eight private cabins,
'and male
masseurs. Clean and well-maintained, and has been completely refurbished
over the last
year. This sauna is the most active of the four in the city and the
all-nighters on Saturday are very active. http://welcome.to/sauna240
Cueva, Av. Aviaci6n 2514, San Bona, Lima. Exclusively gay and lesbian.
Open Thu. - Sat. from 11 P.M. This was originally the home of Lima's
first gay
disco, Perseo.
Friday and Saturday there's a show at 3 A.M.
Downtown Vale Todo, Pasaje Los Pinos 160, Miraflores, Lima. Tel: 444-6433
or 444-6436. Open Wed. - Sun. from 10:30 P.M. Mixed gay and lesbian.
This most popular
dance club in Lima attracts a mostly younger crowd, with go-go boys
and a stripper at 3 A.M. There's a cruise bar on the balcony overlooking
the dance
floor. www.gayperu.com/downtownvaletodol
Kafe Kitsch, Av. Bolognesi 743, Barranco, Lima. Open Wed. - Sat. from
10:00 P.M. until very late. Gay-friendly. They play a nice selection
of music, a mixture
of 80's pop, including some well known gay favorites, along with modern popular
Latin music.
Minotauro Club, Manuel del Pi no 694, Santa Beatriz (off block 14 of
Avenida Arequipap), Lima. Tel: 471-8141. Bar for gay men only, with
dance floor,
cafe, internet room, and dark room. www.minotauroclub.com
Oupen Sauna, Av. 28 de Julio 171, Miraflores, Lima. Tel: 242-3094.
Open Mon. - Sun., 2:00 P.M. -11 P.M. Wed. - Sat. after 6 P.M. are the
most
popular days. www.vermail.netloupensaunal
Sagitario, Av. Wilson 869, Centro. Lima. Tel: 4244383, or 933-9925.
Exclusively gay. Open Mon.Sun. One of the oldest surviving gay discos
in Lima center
and is busy seven nights of the week. A cruise bar on the balcony overlooks
the main
dance floor. www.gayperu.com/sagitariodisco
La Sede, Av. 28 de Julio 441, Miraflores, Lima. Tel: 242-2462. Open
Wed. - Sat. 10 P.M. until very late. Popular gay- and lesbian-friendly
bar
and dance club.
www.publasede.com
Splash, Pasaje Los Pinos 181, Miraflores, Lima. Mixed gay, lesbian,
and transvestite. Open Thu.Sat. from 10:30 P.M. A good alternative
if you
prefer somewhere
that is less crowded, has less smoke, and offers a different music
mix. CUZCO
Fallen Angel, Plazoleta Nazarenas 221, Cusco.
Tel: 258-184. The place to be in Cusco for GLBT travelers.
Macondo, Cuesta San Bias 571, Cusco. Tel: 229415. Gay-friendly cafe and bar.
Artsy, funky, and friendly with good food in generous portions.
White Vinyl, Espaderos 135 (second floor), Cusco. Gay-friendly
disco.
WEBSITES www.gayperu.com - An extensive
and glitzy website covering all the queer who, what, when, and
where in Lima and throughout Peru.
From:"Boletín Diversidad"
< boletindiversidad@raizdiversidadsexual.org>
www.raizdiversidadsexual.org
21 June 2005
6
EXITOSA JORNADA SOLIDARIA CON COMPAÑERAS TRAVESTIS (SUCCESSFUL
SUPPORTIVE DAY WITH TRAVESTIS COMPANIONS)
¡
Porque el Orgullo Radikal no es un día, ni una marcha, sino
un proceso de todos los días!
Lima 20 de junio (Raíz Diversidad Sexual).
El sábado 18 de junio por la noche mientras los autoproclamados “Líderes
(leaders) del Movimiento LGTB” convocaban
y desconvocaban marchas por el día del “Orgullo”,
los voluntarios del Comité por
la Liberación y la Diversidad Sexual nos empezábamos
a juntar en la segunda cuadra de Quilca, con bastante frío,
cuando parecía que nuestra propia actividad naufragaría
dentro del mar de confusión existente, fue que vimos a Belissa
Andía la actual secretaria de la Asociación de Lesbianas,
Trans y Gays de América Latina y el Caribe (ILTGA-LAC),
que gentilmente vino a solidarizarse, demostrando que las verdaderas
líderes son aquellas que se relacionan directamente con
sus bases.
Posteriormente,
llegaron nuestros amigos del Grupo Juvenil Fénix trayendo el pan solidario. Todo eso nos animó y
se empezó a preparar el café y mientras que todos
levantábamos la ‘olla común’, la asistencia
era cada vez mayor, allí sumábamos casi veinticinco
personas, una pequeña marchita. No solamente éramos
los siempre LGTB además se contaba la presencia del Ágora
Popular, la Juventud Comunista de Patria Roja, la Juventud del
PDD, la Coordinadora Otro Mundo es Posible, el Taller Libertario,
Indymedia-Perú y la Federación de Estudiantes del
Perú; es así que todos nos dirigimos a nuestro primer
punto de encuentro: el conocido Cine Tauro.
Con nuestra olla común, LGTB’s y solidarios recorrimos
los diversos puntos donde se concentran nuestros compañeros
en estado de prostitución, donde oportunamente Belissa,
Jorge y Eros conversaron directamente con ellos. La denuncia reiterada
fue el maltrato y extorsión que sufren por parte del Serenazgo
(Policía Municipal), incluso un compañero de Indymedia
pudo filmar los moretones de una compañera trans agredida.
Por ello, la jornada solidaria también fue de protesta y ‘de
esa’ que cotidianamente se hace en las calles y que es más
alta con los tacones y la minifalda.
¿
Y la represión azul?… Esta vez no se atrevió a
intervenir ya que los disuadió ver más de treinta
personas dispuestas a responder si era necesario. Sin dudas el
momento cumbre fue en la Av. Uruguay, cuando entre nuestras compañeros
trans, solidarios y curiosos llegamos a ser alrededor de cincuenta,
allí el Serenazgo que siempre es muy valiente cuando son
mayoría simplemente se limitaron a observarnos. Ya era medianoche
y nuestras compañeros tenían que regresar a la ‘chamba’,
nos despedimos de ellos y retornamos al famoso jirón Quilca
donde improvisamos una pequeña concentración, unas
palabritas, nuestras tradicionales arengas y la certeza que la
Marcha del Orgullo no es un día sino un proceso de lucha
constante contra toda forma de opresión.
¡Festivo y Combativo Avanza el Orgullo Radikal!
Comité por la Liberación y la Diversidad Sexual
liberacionydiversidadsexualogmail.com
VIDEOS:
http://peru.indymedia.org/news/2005/06/17137.php Visita
Nuestra Web:
www.raizdiversidadsexual.org
Tres años por la Conquista de la Alegría, el Pan
y la Belleza
Otros Mundos Son Posibles... Construyendo Democracia Radical
Alert
from International Gay and Lesbian Humna Rights Commission (New
York)
March
20, 2006 7
Police
Attack Transvestite in Lima
by
Belissa
Andía, Coordinator , Claveles Rojos (translated into English):
In
the early hours of March 17, at around 3.30, a Serenazgo
team was ‘combing
out’ the
Petit Thours Avenue, in Lima, when they spotted Sandra – a
transvestite who usually hangs around the area. The team
was made up of 6 officers, traveling in a double-decker
van and
accompanied
by a National Police officer.
Sandra
knew very well what it meant to be approached by a Serenazgo
team and, instinctively,
ran as
fast as she could to Avenue Militar at Bartolome Herrera
Street.
There, the transphobic team intercepted her. The
six men started beating her with sticks, shoving and kicking her
around, and
verbally attacking her. She was dragged by her hair,
and her blouse and
jeans were torn apart. Serenazgo officers took her
purse, with the 80 Soles (24 US$) she had made during the night.
They also
wanted to take away her high-heeled shoes, but she
resisted.
The men shouted, “Let us take everything, do not
resist, stop screaming!”
But
Sandra was not willing to part from her shoes and the
officers, feeling furious
and frustrated
before her resistance,
stuck a knife blade into the back of her left thigh.
The National
Police officer watched the aggression unmoved,
and his only intervention
was to encourage the Serenazgo men to move forward
with
robbing Sandra.
Alejandra,
who is Sandra’s
neighbor, came to see us that night and told us about the
incident. We went
immediately to see Sandra and took her to the Lince Police
Station. At first,
the officer was reluctant to take a complaint. When he
realized that we knew it was his duty to take it, he had
no choice but
to register a complaint of abuse against
Lima’s Serenazgo and Luis Castañeda Lossio, head of the organization.
At first, the officer argued that we had not come to the
Police Station immediately
after the aggression to register the complaint, that many
hours had gone by, that Sandra did not have an ID, that
we had to
take the complaint to the Attorney’s Office,
etc.
Concerned
about her wound, Sandra took antibiotics on her own, without
checking with a doctor. It would have been ideal
for her to go to a hospital
to have the tetanus vaccination applied, her
wound cleaned and the entire procedure overseen by a
qualified health
professional. However, many transvestites
do not go to hospitals because
they
are not treated properly there; many
prefer to instead follow the advice of their
friends.
We
will continue following the case closely. Tomorrow, Sandra
has to see the Police Doctor.
Then
she will testify for the inquiry, opened by
the Lince Police Station, with regard to this flagrant
violation of human
rights. We have
visited several districts in Lima City and
everywhere we have heard complaints by transvestites against
the Serenazgos--
sometimes
accompanied by National Police officers-- who
act like criminals
despite being part of institutions dedicated
to enforcing the law.
We
will take this new case to the Ombudsman office,
and
it will
lie there, together with many others that
do not seem to disturb our authorities in the
slightest. We expect more
serious incidents
to occur, but we believe that not
even then will this problem be taken seriously.
This
whole series of incidents reflects the State’s double standards.
The institutions who claim to protect the order and public customs
are in
charge of doing
the dirty work. They repress and, if possible,
eliminate everything that challenges the fundamentalist beliefs
of
those in power.
Those who never see their rights questioned
refuse to accept that sexual
diversity, in all its expressions-- lesbians,
gays, transvestites, transgenders, transsexuals, the intersexed,
bisexuals--
exists. It is these sexual minorities who
are foolishly depraved of
their fundamental human rights.
Belissa
Andía,
Coordinator , Claveles
Rojos
International
Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission
"Paula Ettelbrick" executive_director@iglhrc.org
October 26, 2006
8
New Incidents of Police Brutality Against Lesbians
The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC)
is deeply concerned about recent arrests of members of the LGBT
community by Peruvian law enforcement agents. IGLHRC joins Peruvian
activists in denouncing abuses against people in gay bars
and trans sex workers perpetrated by Serenazgo officers (a security body
active in Lima, whose legal status is not yet clearly specified
by law) back in December 2005 and March 2006. This
time, the victims were lesbians in a Lince district bar.
On October 13, 2006, Serenazgo officers, together with troops
of the tactical actions unit (SUAT), and of the National Police,
raided
the 'Avenida 13' bar, a place frequented by young lesbians. Reporters
of different television channels accompanied the police and filmed
the incident. Activists of Raiz Diversidad have requested a meeting
with Lince town officials in connection with this, but they have
not received an answer yet.
ACTION__IGLHRC joins Raiz Diversidad’s activists’ call
for a letter-writing campaign to denounce this violence and
demanding a stop to the intimidation and violence against lesbian,
gay and
transvestis in Lima.
Doug
Ireland
http://direland.typepad.com/direland/2006/10/i_wrote_the_fol.html
October 31, 2006
9
New Anti-Gay Crackdown in Peru
Posted by Doug Ireland
A massive and violent October 13 police raid
on a lesbian bar in Lima, Peru, signaled a stepped-up campaign
of repression
of gays,
lesbians and the transgendered in advance of coming municipal
elections in that nations’ capital.
Dozens of officers from the National Police and from the Serenazgo-a
local auxiliary police paid by the municipality of Lima-arrived
in a half-dozen pick-up trucks
and numerous police cars, cordoned off Calle Manuel Segura in the Lince district,
five minutes from downtown Lima, and engaged in a muscular raid on "Avenida
13," a bar frequented in large part by
young lesbians. Anyone who did not have an identity card was arrested, and
when many young lesbians-panicked by the violent police conduct-refused to
leave the
bar, they were dragged out and beaten.
After
the detention en masse of the young women, police proceeded to
the second floor of the building, where a
gay bar, "68," frequented
primarily by men, is located, raiding it as well in the same violent fashion.
The
total number of arrests is not known with precision, but three huge police
detention vans, each capable of holding 50 people, were parked near the
raid site, and
at least one of them was seen driving away crammed with prisoners.
Local gay activists attributed this latest police raid to Lima's approaching
city elections, in which candidates are "looking for an opportunity
create a law and order image for themselves to help their re-election," according
to a statement by the LGBT group Raiz Diversidad Sexual (RDS, or Root of
Sexual Diversity). The fact that reporters from more than one of Lima's
TV stations
accompanied the police raid in order to film it lends credence to the thesis
of a baldly political motivation for the crackdown.
The two bars that were
raided are in a district represented by Cesar Gonzalez Arribasplata, a
city council member who serves as the neighborhood's
mayor and is part of the governing APRA Party of Peruvian President Alan
Garcia (right.)
"Whenever
City Hall wants to conduct a moral cleansing of the neighborhoods,
there are raids on the gay bars and discotheques
of Lima," Victor Cortez, a 26-year-old sociologist and RDS activist,
told Gay City News from Lima. "But it's since the election in 2002
as mayor of Lima of Luis Castaneda Lossio (left), who belongs to the
most conservative right-wing
party, that things have gotten worse."
Lima's
mayor is seeking re-election this fall. Gay activist Cortez
said, "Gays and lesbians
can no longer walk freely in the center city and in its parks and squares.
If a policeman suspects
you of being homosexual by the way you walk or gesture, he'll intimidate
you with force and the use of police dogs, and often beat you."
"The
transgendered and the drag queens are targets of particularly aggressive
and violent police
abuse," he added. "In the richer neighborhoods, where these
poor girls are obliged to work to support themselves, there have
been cases where they've
been killed-last year one of these girls was killed and burned. And
when there are mass detentions, they are frequently taken to far-away
outlying
areas, beaten,
and dumped there. Things are even worse if one is of indigenous ethnicity.
And in the rest of the city, it's the same thing-the Serenazgo carry
out mass detentions
of gays and lesbians."
The
Serenazgo are an auxiliary police under the direct control of
the neighborhood mayors in each Lima
district
and, Cortez said, they
are generally thugs recruited from private security services who
receive no special police training. "The Serenazgo are supposed
to maintain public order, but in reality their function is to repress
anything
that differs from heterosexual
normality-gays and lesbians, punks, left-wingers, etc.. There is
no legal code governing their actions or prescribing their functions-in
reality,
they're out
of control," Cortez explained.
"Over time the serenos,
as we call them, have become dedicated to making sure there are no
gatherings
or discussion
meetings in public places, especially in the center city, to prevent
spontaneous demonstrations against the government or the neighborhood
mayors," Cortez
noted.
On January 28 of this year, Serenazgo officers broke up a political
gathering in support of Lima trans activist Belissa Andia (left),
who was running
for a seat in the National Congress-and verbally and physically
assaulted members
of
the crowd. Belissa Andia and her organization-Claveles Rojos-had
been leading a campaign against Serenazgo brutality.
"In
other Lima neighborhoods, the serenos have also been denounced
for excessive violence against these targeted
groups," Cortez said. "Although they don't have the
right under the law to make arrests-in theory arrests are reserved
for the National Police-it's
habitual to see the serenos deploy trucks where they detain
people they consider suspect," including LGBT people.
Although
homosexuality is not specifically a crime under Peruvian
law, laws designed to regulate "public morality" are
almost exclusively deployed against gays, lesbians, and the
transgendered.
"The
dominant political discourse here emphasizes that law and
order demands the containment of the lacras socialies, the scum
of society, and that includes everyone
from transvestites who engage in prostitution to gays who
are
caught in raids on discotheques," said Cortez.
On
July 14, Serenazgo officers broke into three discos patronized
by
lesbian, gay, and trans people. Officers blocked the
exits and beat and insulted the disco owners, workers,
and patrons. The raids were carried out without the participation
of the National Police, required by
law to be present at such a law enforcement action.
Cortez
told Gay City News that there are small venues that
specifically welcome gays and lesbians in most
sizable Peruvian cities-bars, discos, saunas-but that "these
places are generally clandestine, and operate with
only precarious authorization. Frequently
their owners have to go to court to prevent the closing
and seizure of their properties."
Gay-bashing,
said Cortez, is frequent throughout Peru, and he
added that "the
transgendered are the targets of bashing to a surprising
degree."_"The
press," he added, "speaks of us only to
mock us, make fun of us, and make us seem ridiculous,
as
if we're only interested in creating scandalous behavior.
When TV broadcasts
speak of LGBT people, it's
either when a crime or a theft is committed by someone
gay, or once a year during the Gay Pride March."
The
first Gay Pride March in Peru was held in Lima
in 1997, "but
with very few people," Cortez related, "while
this year, it attracted some 500 people-gay activists,
members of
invited political parties, and sympathizers of
the LGBT struggle." The
gay movement in Peru, he explained, is still small.
Lima has two principal groups. Cortez described
the MHOL as a group "founded in the 1980s
by left activists, but which has become very assimilationist
and neo-liberal in
its politics over the years." It "only
addresses the concerns of well-off gays, like the
issue of gay marriage, and is very close to the
governing APRA party." The
MHOL, he said, has a core of six activist members,
but more sympathizers who come to its weekly meetings
for youth as well as its adult gatherings. It's
Web site,
http://mhol.pe.tripod.com/mhol/id8.html, has not
been updated since 2002.
The
RDS, to which Cortez belongs, "self-identifies
as part of the critical left and as part of the
anti-globalization movement." The
group, whose Web site is http://www.raiz.org.pe:80/,
has a dozen active members at its core and a
larger circle of sympathizers.
Outside
Lima, Cortez said, "there
are not a multitude of gay organizations, and
they tend to be ephemeral and have no staying
power...
The lack
of a process
of gay consciousness-raising in the
rest of the country outside Lima means that a
truly national gay movement in Peru is still
only a hope
and a dream."
Gaywired.com
http://www.gaywired.com/article.cfm?section=123&id=11935
10
Gay Couple Tie the Knot in Peru's First Same-Sex Wedding
December 09, 2006
by Anthony Cuesta
In what became the first gay marriage ceremony to take place in Peru was held this week in Lima, setting a precedent for the South American nation. News site LivinginPeru.com reports that a British citizen and his Peruvian partner formalized their union under British law in a ceremony held at the British Embassy in Lima. Although the legal union between two adults of the same sex is not permitted in Peru, the couple was able to legally validate their partnership under British law. Peter Goad, a British citizen, and Marco Bretoneche, his Peruvian partner, both 42 years old, were wed last Thursday according to LivinginPeru.com.
“Let this marriage serve as a precedent to Peru and let our union be recognized under the eyes of Peruvian law. We have the right to happiness, respect, and legal equality,” stated Bretoneche in a statement released this week. The British Embassy requested clearance from the Peruvian government prior to the ceremony, to which the Peruvian authorities gave the green light reminding the British authorities that the ceremony has no legal merit under Peruvian law. Britain’s Civil Partnership Act, which became law in 2004, permits the marriage of two individuals of the same sex.
Mexico City,
the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires and the southern Brazilian state
of Rio Grande do Sul are the only places in Latin America where same-sex
civil unions are legalized. According to to the Washington Post, lawmakers
in Costa Rica and Colombia have debated, but not passed, similar measures.
The Post reports that the large Mexican state of Coahuila, which borders
Texas, is now considering a gay union law.
ILGA-LAC
Conference Lima
4th Regional Conference in Latin America and the Caribbean
July 17, 2007
11
ILGA will
hold its 4th meeting in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The conference will take place in Lima from 20 – 23 of September
2007.
It aims at gathering a large number of activists dealing with LGBT
issues in Latin America and the Caribbean (ILGA members and non members)
to further progress their advancement.
A regional consultation only makes sense if a great number of activists
from all regions of Latin America and the Caribbean attend. We have
been working to secure enough funding to bring around 40 activists
to the
conference. It is equally important though that groups decide themselves
what will be the agenda of the meeting.
That is why we invite you to join us in web-forums where you,
as groups but also as individuals will be able to propose the workshops
of the
conference, candidate activists for elections, decide what should be
their mandate after the conference, submit ideas or proposals to be
voted at the conference. The conference is also likely to draft and
adopt a
regional constitution.
We trust this process will be a transparent event, providing accessible
information to all activist and groups involved with the conference,
so they are able to participate and make informed decisions. We have
therefore created a website in Spanish, Portuguese, and English.
We invited you to visit the conference website to get more detailed
information about ILGA and its fourth regional conference in Latin
America and the
Caribbean. We hope to see you in Lima.
Sincerely,
Gloria Careaga
Beto de Jesús
Belissa Andía Pérez
ILGA-LAC Board Members, Latin America and Caribbean
From The Associated Press
August 16, 2007 12
Strong
Earthquake Strikes Peru, Hundreds Dead
Lima, Peru
By Laura Puertas and Jon Elsen
A powerful earthquake shook Peru Wednesday
night, killing at least 337 people, Civil Defense authorities said
today. More than 800 people are believed to have been injured.
Most of the reported dead were in the region near Ica, south
of the capital, which emergency workers said appeared to be the area that
was hardest hit. The earthquake, whose magnitude was estimated at 7.9,
was centered off Peru’s Pacific shore near Ica.
Many people were killed in the rubble of their homes, and about 200
people were buried under a collapsed church. Emergency workers said
the death toll might be even greater.
Ica was blacked out, as were smaller towns along the coast south of
Lima. Rescue workers reported difficulty getting to Ica because of
cracks in the highway and downed power lines.
At least 200 people in Pisco in southern Peru were crushed under the
rubble of a church that collapsed during a religious service, The Associated
Press reported, citing the mayor of Pisco, Juan Mendoza Uribe.
Mr. Mendoza Uribe said 70 percent of Pisco, a port city of
about 60,000 people located 135 miles south of Lima, was leveled by
the quake. “
So much effort and our city is destroyed,” he said, crying audibly,
in comments broadcast on radio station RPP in Lima. The city remained
without electricity this morning. Peruvian news organizations reported
that bodies were strewn in streets where houses had collapsed.
Office workers in Lima fled tall buildings that shook in two waves
that lasted around 20 seconds each and cut power lines, Reuters reported. “
I was in class on the fifth floor, and suddenly everything started
to shake and glass began falling,” said Carolina Montero, 37,
a banking administrator and finance student who lives in Callao, a
coastal city near Lima. “People got extremely nervous.”
Fernando Calderon, an American in Lima, said he was in his hotel when
the quake struck. He described the scene as unreal, with buildings
swaying from right to left, and the ground shaking.
“
We realized everybody was out, and the ground was shaking for a minute,” he
said by telephone in an interview with CNN. “Finally we started
hearing glass breaking, and things falling out of the building and
that’s when everybody started screaming, praying, children crying.
It was just awful.”
Electra Anderson, another American, told CNN by telephone from her
apartment in Peru that it seemed when the quake began that many people
had no idea what was happening, and ran into the streets screaming
and crying.
“
We’re used to earthquakes,” said Ms. Anderson, who is from
California. “But it just didn’t stop; it kept going and
going, and it kept getting stronger and stronger.” She added that
she counted about 70 aftershocks: “It’s
just been non-stop.”
Her belongings in the apartment went flying and the glass windows appeared
to be bending in. “People really thought they were going to die,” Ms.
Anderson said.
The United States Geological Survey said the earthquake struck about
90 miles southeast of Lima at a depth of about
25 miles. Four strong
aftershocks ranging from magnitudes of 5.4 to 5.9 followed.
A tsunami warning was issued for Peru, Chile, Ecuador and Colombia,
and a small tsunami was detected, but it posed no major threat and
the warning was later lifted, news services reported.
The last time a quake of magnitude 7.0 or larger struck Peru was in
September 2005, when a 7.5 magnitude earthquake rocked Peru’s
northern jungle, killing four people. In 2001, a 7.9-magnitude quake
struck near the southern Andean city of Arequipa, killing 71 people.
Laura Puertas reported from Lima, Peru, and Jon Elsen reported from
New York. Simon Romero contributed reporting from Caracas, Venezuela,
and Christine Hauser contributed from New York.
---------------
New York
Times
August 17, 2007
Toll Climbs to 510 in Peru
By Simon Romero
The death toll along Peru’s earthquake-ravaged
southern coast climbed to 510 today, a top fire department official
said, with at least 17,000 people displaced and wide areas without
power, telephone service or road access.
At least 300 of the dead were in Pisco, a port city about 125 miles
south of Lima, and more were thought to be buried in rubble, local
officials said. Dozens were inside the San Clemente cathedral, which
was full for Mass when the quake caused it to cave in around 6:40 p.m.
on Wednesday. Witnesses said the spire bell clanged horribly in the
seconds before it tumbled down...
----------------
Associated
Press
August 17, 2007
Anxious Peru quake survivors loot market
By Frank Bajak inPissco, Peru
Associated Press writers Jeanneth Valdivieso in Pisco and Monte Hayes
in Lima contributed to this report.
Hungry earthquake survivors ransacked a public market
Friday, while other mobs looted a refrigerated trailer and blocked
aid trucks, prompting Peru's president to appeal for calm. Aid finally
arrived to the disaster zone after about 36 hours without much help.Few buildings
still stood in the fishing city of Pisco Friday in the wake of a
magnitude-8 earthquake that killed 510 people. Many of the structures
not reduced to rubble were rickety deathtraps waiting to fall.
President Alan Garcia, on the scene for the second straight day, vowed
that no one would die of hunger or thirst.
"
I understand your desperation, your anxiety," he said. "There
is no reason to fall into exaggerated desperation."
Garcia predicted "a situation approaching normality" in 10
days, but acknowledged that reconstruction would take far longer.
Two sunrises after the earthquake all but leveled this city of 90,000
people on Peru's desert southern coast, workers continued to pull bodies
from rubble, the region lacked water and electricity, and officials
began to worry about the outbreak of disease.
The death count stood at 510, according to Peru's fire department,
and hopes of finding more survivors diminished. At least 1,500 people
suffered injuries and Garcia said 80,000 people had lost loved ones,
homes or both.
Brig. Maj. Jorge Vera, chief of the rescue operation, said 85 percent
of Pisco's downtown was rubble.
The relief effort was finally getting organized. Police identified
bodies and civil defense teams ferried in food. Housing officials assessed
the need for new homes, and in several towns long lines formed under
an intense sun to collect water from soldiers.
In the capital of Lima, Peruvians donated tons of supplies as food,
water, tents and blankets began arriving in the quake zone.
Peruvian soldiers also began distributing aluminum caskets, allowing
the first funerals. In Pisco's cemetery, lined with collapsed tombs
and tumbled crosses, a man painted the names of the dead on headstones — some
200 were lined up. Grieving relatives lowered coffins into shallow
graves. "
My dear child, Gloria!" wailed Julia Siguis, her hands spread
over two small coffins holding her cousin and niece. "Who am I
going to call now? Who am I going to call?"
All day, people with no way to refrigerate corpses rushed coffins through
the cemetery gate, which leaned dangerously until a bulldozer came
to knock it down. Doctors at Pisco's hospital were treating 169 people
but failed to save 30 others. Medical services were moved to a basketball
court and
the damaged hospital building was being used as a morgue, said Dr.
Jose Renteros, the physician in charge. Many injured had been flown
to Lima.
More aftershocks jolted the region, frightening survivors, who fell
to their knees in prayer, but doing little damage. At least 18 tremors
of magnitude-5 or greater had struck since the initial quake, which
people said pumped the ground in violent jabs Wednesday evening like
the pistons of a car engine. Survivors told tales of lost loved ones — a
girl selling sweets outside a bank, a young woman studying dance, crushed
when buildings
made of unreinforced adobe and brick collapsed during the earth's interminable
two minutes of heaving.
About 15 guests and workers couldn't get out as the five-story Embassy
Hotel accordioned onto its ground floor. A billiard hall buried as
many as 20 people.
Manuel Medina said he had dug the body of his 12-year-old nephew, Miguel
Blondet Soto, and a dozen other children from their English classroom
at the San Tomas school. "Those who were in front managed to get
out, but those in the back died," he said.
Soaring church ceilings tumbled onto the faithful in towns all around
this gritty port city, covering pews in tons of stone, timbers and
dust. "
People were running out the front door screaming," said Renzo
Hernandez, who watched from the other side of Pisco's main plaza as
the San Clemente church disintegrated.
The survivors, bloodied and covered in dust, hugged one another in
terror and relief, he said. "It felt like the end of the world."
Fishing boats lay marooned in city streets in nearby San Andres, and
an oceanside neighborhood of Pisco looked like New Orleans after Hurricane
Katrina, with piles of rubble poking from water that rushed in during
the tremor.
Searchers still sought bodies and survivors in the rubble of San Clemente
church, where hundreds had gathered Wednesday for a funeral Mass when
the quake struck. About 50 bodies had been removed, said Jorge Molina,
the search team leader. "We've heard sounds. There are two places
where we're hearing taps, very faint taps," he said.
Molina held out hope for finding more people alive — a man was
pulled from the church wreckage Thursday.
But searchers were having little luck as they went block to block in
Pisco, shouting into piles of brick and mortar: "We're firefighters!
If you can hear us, shout or strike something!"
The U.S. government released $150,000 in cash to pay for emergency
supplies and dispatched medical teams — one of which was already
on the ground. It also sent two mobile clinics and loaned two helicopters
to Peruvian authorities.
But the U.S. Navy hospital ship Comfort, now docked in Ecuador, won't
make the three-day trip to Pisco because both governments decided it
wasn't needed. The Comfort carries 800 medical personnel, but Peru
needs supplies more than doctors, U.S. Embassy spokesman Dan Martinez
said.
pinknews.co.uk
http://pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-6337.html
14th December 2007
13
Peru urged to protect LGBT youth
byPinkNews.co.uk staff writer
The Peruvian Congress is under pressure from gay rights activists to become a party to a convention on the rights of young people. The Ibero-American Convention on the Rights of Youth seeks to promote and safeguard the rights of young people and remedy the inequality that thousands of young people confront for a variety of reasons, including for having a sexual orientation different from heterosexuality. But the Foreign Relations Committee of the Congress of Peru has raised concerns in this respect, and opposes the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) young people. The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) and the Homosexual Movement of Lima (MHOL) are asking people to write to the Peruvian lawmakers about the convention.
In a letter to Dr. Luis González Posada Eyzaguirre President of the Congress of the Peruvian Republic, IGLHRC said: "Far from promoting same-sex unions, the only right that the convention grants to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people involves non-discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. This convention recognises that building just and humane societies requires recognising the diversity that exists in every community. We urge the Peruvian Congress to take these arguments into account and ratify the convention without reservations."
The Ibero-American Summit, a meeting of the Spanish, Portugese and Catalan-speaking nations of the world, has been held annually since 1991. The convention was adopted at the 2005 summit, held in Salamanca, Spain. The most recent summit in Chile hit the headlines when King Juan Carlos of Spain told the Venuzuelan president Hugo Chavez to shut up after he branded the former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar a "fascist."
IGLHRC points out that in 2002 the Peruvian President signed the Andean Charter to Promote and Protect Human Rights.
Article 10 of this Charter reaffirms the decision of Andean states to combat all forms of racism, discrimination, xenophobia and any other form of intolerance or exclusion against individuals or groups.
Section F of the Charter is devoted specifically to the rights of people whose sexual orientation differs from that of the majority. Article 52 recognises that all people, regardless of their sexual orientation or choice, are entitled to the same human rights.
In Article 52, the signatories commit themselves to combating all forms of discrimination against individuals based on their sexual orientation or choice, paying special attention to preventing and punishing violence and discrimination against those whose sexual orientation or choice differs from that of the majority.
The signatories also commit to providing legal resources for effective remedy in cases of damage caused by such crimes.
For more information on the IGLHRC campaign click here.
springerlink.com
http://www.springerlink.com/content/q1m7276761543322/
27 December 2007
14
New Populations at High Risk of HIV/STIs in Low-income, Urban Coastal Peru
by Carlos F. Cáceres, Kelika A. Konda, Ximena Salazar, Segundo R. Leon, Jeffrey D. Klausner, Andrés G. Lescano, André Maiorana, Susan Kegeles, Franca R. Jones, Thomas J. Coates and The NIMH HIV/STD Collaborative Intervention Trial
Abstract The HIV epidemic in Peru is concentrated primarily among men who have sex with men. HIV interventions have focused exclusively on a narrowly defined group of MSM and FSW to the exclusion of other populations potentially at increased risk. Interventions targeting MSM and FSW are insufficient and there is evidence that focusing prevention efforts solely on these populations may ignore others that do not fall directly into these categories. This paper describes non-traditional, vulnerable populations within low-income neighborhoods. These populations were identified through the use of ethnographic and epidemiologic formative research methods and the results are reported in this publication. Although the traditional vulnerable groups are still in need of prevention efforts, this study provides evidence of previously unrecognized populations at increased risk that should also receive attention from HIV/STI prevention programs.
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