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Sites and Insights Gay Sweden News & Reports Also see: Gay Sweden story 1 Gay Iranian Faces Sure Execution if Expelled from Sweden 1/99 1a Gay Iranian man granted asylum in Sweden 9/99 2 Swede Parliament Has the Most Women 12/99 3 Sweden Seeks to Bolster Gay Couples' Right to Adopt 2/02 4 Sweden OKs Same-Sex Adoption Plan 6/02 5 Swedish gay couples may get own adoption agency 12/02 6 Sweden to Allow Its Embassies to Wed Gay Couples 3/03 7 Swedish gays run "gay kid" ads 7/03 8 Swedish gay couples adopt after change in law 10/03 9 Swedish church takes step towards gay marriages 10/03 10 Gay kiss ban could land restaurateur in jail 11/03 11 Church of Sweden to introduce a ceremony for same-sex couples 1/04 12 Not such a gay day for Swede--Not gay enough! 2/04 13 Sweden poised for gay marriage nod 3/04 14 Restaurant fined for throwing out kissing lesbians 4/05 15 Sweden's Supreme Court to review acquittal of pastor who denounced homosexuals 5/05 16 Swedes Dispute Translation of a Dag Hammarskjold biography 5/05 18 Swedish gay blood ban stays 12/06 19 Church of Sweden gives gay couples church blessing 12/06 20 Church of Sweden Open to Gay 'Marriage' Ceremonies 3/07 21 LGBT groups get UN recognition 7/07 22 50,000 join Stockholm Pride parade 8/07 22a Gay Jesus Photos Spark Violence In Sweden 8/07 23 Swedish government funds gay rights group 9/07 24 Gay Marriage in the Cards 10/07 25 Moderates back gay marriage 10/07 26 Swedes supportive of gay marriage 1/08 27 Infections up 20% in Sweden 2/08 28 High court to rule on gay marriage dispute 5/08 29 Swedes donate 5,000 euros to Warsaw Pride 5/08 30 Sober gays will gather at EuroPride 6/08 31 Stockholm gets ready for EuroPride 7/08 32 Stockholm police confirm stabbing of gay man was a hate crime 7/08 33 Gay 'Indian prince' charms Sweden! 8/08 Note:
Sweden hosted an interdisciplinary conference on "Same-sex couples,
same-sex
partnerships and homosexual marriages" with "a focus on cross-country
differentials" in Stockholm, 25-26 September 2003. January 1999 1
21 September 1999 "A
few weeks ago I reported about Fahrad Miran, a gay Iranian man,
who was facing
expulsion from Sweden. Yesterday 21 September 1999 he was
granted permanent residence permit by The Swedish Aliens
Appeals Board (Utlänningsnämnden). December 1999 2 The United States was far down on the list. It holds 43rd place, with women making up 13.3 percent of the members of the House of Representatives, according to updated IPU records. Nordic countries top the survey. Sweden, just under 40 percent in an IPU study issued last October, has risen to 42.7 percent. Denmark is in 2nd place with 37.4 percent, followed by Finland at 37 percent and Norway with 36.4 percent. Rounding out the top 10 were the Netherlands, Iceland, Germany, South Africa, Cuba and Vietnam, which ranged from 36 to 26 percent. China is in 17th place with 21.8 percent women legislators, and Canada is 20th with 20.6 percent. France is in 66th place at 10.9 percent, Russia 73rd at 10.2 and Japan 122nd with 4.6. Countries reporting a total absence of women legislators were Djibouti, Jordan, Kuwait, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Tuvalu, the United Arab Emirates and Vanuatu. Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA ( http://www.latimes.com ) February 24, 2002 3 by Carol
J. Williams, Times Staff Writer Supporters hail the legislation not only for aiming to rectify discrimination against same-sex couples, but also for the clarity it should bring to murky legalities surrounding children already growing up with gay parents. "Such households exist in our society, and in increasing numbers, so we have to recognize that," says Marianne Carlstrom, a lawmaker from Prime Minister Goran Persson's Social Democratic Labor Party, which is sponsoring the bill. "We can't address the needs of these children with gay parents unless we have a legal framework that includes the adoption issue." Under current law, a single parent of either sex can qualify for adoption if he or she passes an extensive state-administered battery of tests probing financial status, emotional stability and social environment. A friend or relative of the opposite sex of the adoptive parent must also commit to providing a gender model for the child. But partners in registered same-sex relationships or marriages are ineligible to adopt, although the law is powerless to prevent a gay person who is single from adopting and bringing up the child with his or her partner. In-vitro fertilization also is restricted to heterosexuals--another inconsistency that parliament is expected to address simultaneously with the adoption law revisions. The current legal gaps hamstring courts increasingly being called on to decide custody and support issues when gay couples with children separate through divorce or death. Legal rights favor the biological mother, but even those are ill-defined if the child was produced by unauthorized in-vitro fertilization. Just last month, a court in the southern city of Orebro ruled that a 35-year-old man who had donated sperm for a lesbian couple's three children is financially responsible for the offspring now that the partners have separated. "These are the consequences of having obsolete laws. This case is being appealed, but it's difficult to see how the court could rule any other way under the existing laws defining parental rights and responsibilities," says Robert Karlsson Svard, information chief for the Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights. Swedish family law still tends to define children and parental rights in the context of a traditional nuclear family, Svard says. With half of Swedish children born out of wedlock and more than a third of marriages ending in divorce, the legally enshrined model no longer applies to the majority of families, he notes. The interest group with 6,500 members was consulted in the bill's drafting and is satisfied with the changes it will bring, Svard says, adding that it will give Sweden the most liberal adoption framework in Europe. Gay adoption already is legal in the Netherlands but only applicable to children born in that country, which, like Sweden, has a dearth of children available for adoption because of liberal abortion and welfare laws. Gay marriage has been legally recognized in Sweden since 1995, encouraging more openness about sexual orientation, Svard says. But neither the federation nor the government maintains statistics on the numbers of gay couples who have married. Sweden's legislation already has won endorsement by all political parties represented in parliament with the exception of the Christian Democrats and the right-of-center Moderates, Carlstrom says. That support should ensure a solid majority during a vote set for June 5 and its passage into law in 2003, she says. Nonetheless, a passionate debate is expected. "There is opposition, even in my own party, but it is based more on emotion than facts. There's not much research on same-sex couples as parents, but we have every reason to believe they are as stable and nurturing as heterosexual parents," Carlstrom says. Svard argues that the bar is probably set even higher for gay couples to qualify for adoption. "There are more rigid demands on these parents, in the same way that a woman in a male-dominated workplace often has to work twice as hard to be successful," he says. June 5, 2002 4 by Kim
Gamel The law will probably take effect early next year. The Social Democratic-led Swedish government proposed the law after a parliamentary research committee found that gay couples would have the same ability to care for the children. Alf Svensson, the leader of the opposition Christian Democrats, had appealed to lawmakers to "make sure that adopted children will be spared experiencing something that every child should be guaranteed not having to experience, that of having only two fathers or only two mothers.'' Gay activists applauded the biil, saying it will bring them closer to gaining the full benefits of marriage. Sweden and fellow Nordic nations Norway, Denmark, Finland and Iceland already recognize legal partnerships between gays, but only Denmark and Iceland allow adoption. "We are now going to fight for the possibility to marry under the same laws as straight couples,'' said Robert Karlsson Svaerd, a spokesman for the Swedish Federation for Gay and Lesbian Rights.
December 27, 2002 5 Stockholm - Gay couples in Sweden, who recently won the right to adopt children, may get their own adoption agency as traditional offices refuse to accept their applications, the daily Metro reported Friday. According to the National Federation for the Equality of the Sexes (RFSL), the six organisations handling adoption requests ostracize homosexual applicants, even after a law giving them adoption rights was passed in February this year. "The adoption agencies have made their views clear. Within the Federation we are now very seriously discussing the possibility of creating an independent adoption agency," RFSL president Soeren Andersson said. Annika Gruenewald, spokeswoman for Adoptionscentrum, defended the position of the traditional agencies, saying that "the people we work with in the countries of origin no longer want to cooperate if children from there are adopted by homosexuals". "In many countries, homosexuality is illegal. Once Sweden is associated with adoption by homosexuals, then the chances of heterosexual couples to adopt children are compromised," she said. Nearly all children adopted in Sweden were born elsewhere.
March
7, 2003 Stockholm - Sweden wants its embassies around the world to marry gay couples, a union that is banned in many countries, the foreign minister said on Friday. Of Sweden's approximately 100 embassies, 21 are authorized to marry men and women if one member of the couple is a Swedish citizen. The government wants those embassies to extend their authority to homosexual marriages. "It is very important for Sweden for civil servants who officiate at weddings to be authorized also to officiate at the registration of partnerships," Foreign Minister Anna Lindh said. Sweden calls gay marriages "registered partnerships," but gay couples have the same legal rights as married heterosexuals in a country with a reputation for tolerance. "Once we have established that a country accepts partnership registration, we will begin to authorize our civil servants at those embassies," Lindh said. France, Israel and Portugal were likely frontrunners, she added. Sweden's embassy in Riyadh is one where heterosexual marriages can take place, but Saudi Arabia - where homosexuals may face the death penalty - would naturally not be among the eight states to be approached in the first wave, a Foreign Ministry official said. Soren Andersson, president of Sweden's biggest gay lobby, said Lindh's comments, made during a debate in parliament, marked an important step toward equal rights for homosexuals. Sweden, one of only a few countries to give gay couples the same rights as married heterosexuals, became the first nation in Europe to let homosexual couples apply for the right to adopt children from abroad.
23 July 2003 7 by Stephen
Brown Stockholm Pride, a volunteer group that organises an annual gay, lesbian and transsexual festival, launched the campaign on its website and plans adverts in the mainstream and gay press. Pride's chairman Anders Selin stressed that all the children depicted are now adult gays, lesbians or transexuals between the ages of 24 and 40. "We're not telling people that every youngster is homosexual but that it should be as respectable as being heterosexual," he told Reuters. Selin said he wanted to provoke debate about how adults' sexual orientation is influenced in childhood by "how our parents raise us and how we're influenced by toy shops etc". But conservative member of parliament Rosita Runegrund, who works for Ecpat, an international network of organisations that combat the sexual exploitation of children, objected to the fact that the campaign gives young children a sexual identity. "Paedophiles use the argument that children have a sexual identity. For me it was a shock to find the pictures on their website because Pride is a respectful organisation," she said. "There is a strong reaction from the public who don't understand these pictures. It's not necessary. Children must have their own experience and it takes time for them to find their own sexual identity," Runegrund told Reuters. Selin, a 36-year-old youth worker who features in one of the adverts himself (as "Anders, seven years old, gay"), said that "as soon as you talk about homosexuality and children everyone starts yelling about paedophiles". Sweden has a tolerant attitude towards gays and lesbians who can enter into legal partnerships, but not same-sex marriages. Children enjoy a privileged position in Swedish society. The state provides free childcare, corporal punishment has long been banned and there is a low incidence of crimes against children.
October 12, 2003 8 Authorities in Sweden have formally recognised the first two cases of gay couples adopting children, following a change in the law which came into effect in February. The TT news agency said that two lesbians in the town of Umeaa had become the legal mothers of a little girl, the biological daughter of one of them. In Stockholm two men had been recognised as co-fathers of a little girl adopted in the United States in 1998. In general, though, the new law has not made a great difference. Since few Swedish children are available for adoption most are brought in from overseas, in particular from China, Colombia and South Korea. The six organisations authorised to bring in such children fear the supply could dry up if the authorities in the countries of origin think the children will end up in homosexual households. - Sapa-AFP
October
22, 2003 by Gleb
Bryanski "We are the first major church that has come to that point." A blessing ceremony for gay partners already exists in the Swedish church but it is not legally binding. Church anguish over homosexuality has deepened, with the Anglican Church just managing to avoid a formal rift in London last week over gay clergy. The head of the Swedish Church, in which most native Swedes are baptized, married and buried but which has some of the lowest church attendance rates in the world, warned there was still work to do before gay weddings went ahead. "It is a step toward making this reality, but a solid theological foundation is needed before the church can go further," Archbishop K G Hammar told a news conference. Opponents to gay marriage have put forward a counterproposal for the church to only recognize marriage as a union between men and women - which was rejected by the assembly. "I feel disappointed. Although they had a majority here at the annual meeting, I do not think the majority of active church members will support this decision," said Nils Arne Rehnstrom, a priest from the town of Pitea in northern Sweden. The Swedish Church, formed soon after German cleric Martin Luther split with Roman Catholicism in the 16th century starting the Reformation, is one of the world's most liberal on sexual issues, allowing gay ministers and gay marriage blessings. But parishes and congregations on the west coast and in the north are more conservative than in Stockholm, which has a woman bishop. About 25 pastors are threatening to form a schism in opposition to ordaining women, which began over 40 years ago. November 14, 2003 10 A Stockholm restaurant owner who kicked out a lesbian couple after he saw them kissing has been charged with discrimination and could face as a year in prison. Aziz Cakir told Anna Fernstroem and Susanne Gustavsson to leave his restaurant because they were gay, according to charges. Prosecutor Tora Holst said Cakir told police he did not accept anybody "making out" in his restaurant, regardless of their sexual orientation. But Holst said she believed the women were targeted because they were lesbian. If convicted, Cakir faces a fine or up to a year in prison, she said. January 2004 Toronto
Ontario, Canada ( http://www.anglicanjournal.com ) 11 Ecumenical News International Stockholm - Plans by the (Lutheran) Church of Sweden to introduce a ceremony for same-sex couples have stirred protests from leaders of other denominations, including the Roman Catholic church, two Orthodox churches and the Pentecostal movement. "This action will inevitably affect ecumenical talks and relations in a negative direction," nine church leaders wrote in a November letter to the board of the Church of Sweden , criticizing the decision. The Church of Sweden's assembly in October commissioned the church board to draw up a liturgy for a church ceremony for same-sex partnerships. The plans come as Sweden's parliament is considering introducing a new "sex-neutral" marriage law, to include both homosexual and heterosexual partnerships. If the new law on marriage is introduced, the church ceremony would mean that homosexual couples would be married in the eyes of the law, as is the case at present with heterosexual couples who get married in church. "We officially accept same-sex relations within the church," said Bo Larsson, head of the office of Archbishop K. G. Hammar, the leader of the Church of Sweden. "And many of us are not only glad and proud of it, but we want to talk about it. Jesus and the Gospel stand for everybody's right to equality and freedom from oppression." The Ombudsman against Discrimination on Grounds of Sexual Orientation, a non-governmental public body set up by the country's parliament in 1999, in November called for a change in the law to allow same-sex couples to get married under the same conditions as heterosexual couples. At present there are different laws in Sweden regulating marriage and "registered partnerships," the latter which is used by same-sex couples to register and make public their relationship. Another law, regulating rights and duties for couples living together, introduced in 2003, applies both to heterosexual and homosexual couples. 5 February 2004 12 A man who claims he was denied access to a gay lounge because the bouncer thought he wasn't gay has reported the club for discrimination based on sexual orientation. George Svede, a spokesman for HomO, a Swedish acronym for the Ombudsman against Discrimination on grounds of Sexual Orientation, said: "This is the first case we have like this." The 27-year-old, who has not been named, visited the night club with a friend, but said they were refused entry to a special lounge called the Gay-VIP Wonderbar. In a complaint filed with HomO, the man said a bouncer stopped them saying "you have to be gay and on the guest list" to enter the lounge. "How do we prove that we are gay? It feels like reverse discrimination," the man said in the complaint. Lounge spokesman David Amberton said the men "obviously weren't gay," but added that was not why they were rejected. "They were not allowed in because they weren't on the guest list and we didn't recognise them," Amberton said. People who feel they've been discriminated against because of religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation or disability can sue for damages under a new discrimination law that took effect last July. Svede said the Ombudsman's office would try to sort the issue out with the club before considering suing for damages. "If the club can't prove that the refusal wasn't based on names on the guest list, then this is a case of discrimination," he said.
March
3, 2004 April 25, 2005 14
16 by
Warren Hoge In addition, it attracted literary notice because the direct
translation
from Swedish by Leif Sjoberg was refined by the poet W. H.
Auden, who also contributed a foreword.
Find enclosed to this mail a study by Lotta Samelius and Erik Wagberg on LGBT issues and development. The study was conducted during 2005 andconsists of a desk study of Swedish policy and administration of LGBT issues at Sida (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency) and SwedishMinistry for Foreign Affairs. Case studies of the life situation of LGBT persons and organsations working with LGBT rights, health and visibility were made in South Africa, Moldova and India. The study concludes that issues in regards to sexual orientation and gender identity in development should be fully included in a framework of human rights and that policy and administration of LGBT issues should be situated within a gender equality and social equity discourse. If you have comments, questions or suggestions don't hesitate to contact the authors or Sida. Best regards The Authors Contact details:
07 December 2006 18 Plans to repeal Sweden’s ban on gay blood donors have been delayed for at least a year. Last August, Sweden’s National Board of Health and Welfare announced they would be reviewing the rule, introduced to prevent the spread of HIV, with many thinking it would be amended to allow donations from gay men who had not had sex for six months. But a medical adviser told the Board that more analysis is needed. Torsten Mossberg told Swedish English-language paper The Local: “The board will make the decision, but we will be recommending that men who have sex with men remain banned. We need to carry out a more thorough risk analysis, and expect to return with a new proposal towards the end of next year.”
6 December 2006 19 "Same-sex couples can now receive an official church blessing in the Swedish Church," the church said. Sweden allows gay couples the same rights as married couples, but the law still defines gay unions as "partnerships", not "marriages". The Church board said couples who had entered into legal civil unions would be able to hold a wedding-like ceremony in the church, which would not however include an exchange of vows. The church is by law not allowed to officiate civil unions. A government-appointed committee is currently examining whether Sweden ought to change a 1987 marriage law to make it "gender neutral", eliminating the last distinction between heterosexual marriages and homosexual unions. Gays were in February 2003 granted the right to adopt children. While some church ministers have already agreed to bless same-sex unions, gay couples have so far not been ensured the official right to a blessing in the Lutheran Church, which until 2000 was a state institution. It still counts 7.2 million members out of a population of nine million. Individual priests may decline to perform the blessing, but the congregation will be responsible for ensuring that a blessing is provided.
March 16, 2007 20 Stockholm, Sweden (AP) - Sweden's Lutheran Church is willing to "marry" gay couples in church if the government decides to make same-sex weddings legal, a spokesman for the Swedish Church Assembly said Friday. Since 1994, Sweden has recognized civil unions between homosexual couples, but marriage in the traditional sense has remained illegal. On Wednesday next week, however, a government-appointed committee will present a report on whether the law allowing civil unions between homosexuals should be changed to also include marriage. Bishop Claes-Bertil Ytterberg, spokesman for the Swedish Church Assembly, the decision-making body for the Church of Sweden, said that if the report proposes a law change to allow homosexual weddings, the church will support it and will open its doors for same-sex ceremonies. But it will be up to the individual priest to decide whether to perform it. "There's been a long discussion and this is a stance that has developed along the way," he said. But, Ytterberg said, even though this would mean that homosexual couples would be wed in the same way as heterosexual couples, the church would like the ceremony to have a different name. "It (the ceremony) joins them in the same way," he said, "but we want it to be called something else because (the word) wedding is so traditional and is reserved for men and women. But the name (of it) is another question." The church blessing of homosexual couples has been a debated issue within the Swedish church community, but in 2005 it decided to allow special church ceremonies to mark civil unions. Ytterberg said there is still some rifts on the issue within the church, but that it had become less visible, particularly among its younger members. Around 7 million of Sweden's 9 million inhabitants belong to the Church of Sweden, but few attend church regularly. The Associated Press
23rd July 2007 21 by PinkNews.co.uk writer In 2006 the German lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender federation and the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) were refused observer status at the United Nations. Friday's decision on the Quebecois and Swedish gay groups had been preceded by forceful lobbying campaigns from countries such as Egypt that do not consider LGBT persons to have legal rights. Canada and other countries argued that LGBT people should be heard at the UN. Sören Juvas, the president of RFSL, called the decision extremely gratifying. "The work that was necessary to reach it has shown the need for a clear voice in favour of LGBT persons' rights in the United Nations," he said. ILGA and Amnesty International estimate that there are currently 90 countries in the world where homosexual contacts are illegal. In several countries, homosexuals risk the death penalty purely on the grounds of their sexual orientation. "RFSL now has the possibility to, together with others, affect and improve the situation for the world's LGBT persons," Mr Juvas added. "We will do everything we can to ensure that everyone has the same opportunities, rights and obligations, regardless of sexual orientation, gender affiliation or expression of gender
4th August 2007 22 Some 50,000 people have marched through Stockholm on Saturday in the 2007 Stockholm Pride parade. Groups representing teachers, police, members of parliament and priests marched in the parade to show support for gay rights. Dress ranged, as usual, from minimalist to maximalist. Some men wore only leather pants and displayed rippling torsos; others, such as well known drag-queen Babsan, Lars-Åke Wilhelmsson, wore more elaborate outfits. Babsan paraded through town on a car roof wearing a glamorous confection. One couple to stand out from the crowd was Joachim Schwartzbach and Frode Tolleröd. Their tiny outfits were complemented by large feather wings and 4,000 crystals placed around their bodies. "It's important to show who you are and dare to stand up for it," said Schwartzbach. Organizers estimate that 50,000 people paraded, while around half a million people watched the parade's progress through the capital. But despite the great public interest and the fact that the Stockholm Pride has previously been attacked by right-wing extremists, police commander Lars Lindros said he expected the afternoon to go smoothly. The biggest problem will be the heat, but we can solve that with lots of liquids," he told news agency TT. This year's parade was the first in which priests from the Lutheran Church of Sweden took part. Ann-Cathrin Jarl, the Archbishop's closest aide. "I think that it is time for the Church of Sweden to give itself some good PR," she said. A large number of members of parliament and ministers also participated. Finance minister Anders Borg said: "I think it's important to take part in demonstrations for tolerance and openness," he said.
August 19, 2007 22a by Gaywired.com
Swedish photographer Elisabeth Ohlson Wallin created her "Ecce Homo" series by putting Jesus into a contemporary lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) context. An online gallery of selected gay Jesus images, including Ohlson Wallin’s work, was recently added to Cherry’s website, JesusInLove.org. "The violence in Sweden is the latest example of why the queer Christ is needed," said lesbian Christian author Cherry. "People try to censor the gay Jesus, but I compiled queer Christ images a book to show that Christ belongs to everybody, even the sexual outcasts. Jesus taught love, but now Christian rhetoric is being used to justify hate and discrimination against women and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people." "Art That Dares" is packed with color images by 11 contemporary artists from the United States and Europe. They work both inside and outside the church, but all of their art respects the teachings of Jesus. In the book, the artists tell the stories behind their images, including censorship, hate mail, violence, death threats, and vandalism that destroyed their work. A lively introduction puts the art into political and historical context, exploring issues of blasphemy and artistic freedom. In addition to the Swedish photos, the explicitly queer Christian imagery in "Art That Dares includes a 24-panel gay vision of the Passion by New York painter F. Douglas Blanchard,/b> and the notorious "faggot crucifixion" painting by Atlanta’s Becki Jayne Harrelson. Gary Speziale sculpts a sensuous moment between a nude Adam and the new Adam, while Alex Donis shows Jesus kissing a Hindu god. Rev. Cherry was at the forefront of the sexuality debate at the National Council of Churches (USA) and the World Council of Churches as National Ecumenical Officer for Metropolitan Community Churches. She holds degrees in journalism, art history and religion.
17th September 2007 23 by Tony Grew Earlier this year The Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs granted money to RFSL for financing of the first Pan African ILGA meeting in Johannesburg. ILGA is a world-wide network of national and local groups dedicated to achieving equal rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) people everywhere. Founded in 1978, it now has more than 560 member organisations. Every continent and around 90 countries are represented. ILGA member groups range from small collectives to national groups and entire cities
October, 2007 24 Sweden’s three opposition parties, the Social Democrats, the Greens and the Left Party have put forward a motion in the Swedish Parliament to allow gay marriages. There is wide support in the parliament for the move, with the only party against the plans the Christian Democrats. They are also in a minority in the government, with three out of four of the ruling parties also in favour, but the Christian Democrat’s opposition means the government is unable to put forward a motion itself. This is the first time the three opposition leaders have put forward a common motion, and they are now hoping enough gay friendly MP’s from the government parties will rebel so they can get a majority in the parliament vote. The government’s small majority mean that only four MP’s have to switch sides. Swedish gays and lesbians can currently become legal partners, but this isn’t quite the same as heterosexual marriage.
27th October 2007 25 Sweden's Moderate Party on Saturday gave its backing to gender-neutral marriages. A large majority of the conference delegates were in favour of a change to the law. The party agreed that the decision of whether to conduct same-sex marriages should be up to the local parishes. The party conference also agreed that lesbian couples should be entitled to artificial insemination treatment at state hospitals and that homosexuals can adopt children. Six of parliament's seven parties have now given their backing to gay marriage . Only the Christian Democrats are opposed and they have vowed to continue arguing against it. A parliamentary inquiry's proposal to introduce a gender-neutral marriage contract is currently under consideration with a response expected by the middle of January. There is broad support in parliament for a change in legislation. But the Christian Democrats and their leader Göran Hägglund say they will do their best to block the proposal. Hägglund reckons the issue could be explosively divisive of the ruling four-party Alliance. "My position is that I have been tasked by the party to argue that marriage is for men and women. When we discuss it between parties we are naturally open and sensitive to each other's arguments and we'll see if we can find a line that allows us to come together," said Hägglund on Swedish Radio's Saturday interview. If the four Alliance parties cannot manage to come to an agreement, Hägglund said it would be "incredibly unfortunate" if the three backers joined up with the three opposition parties on the matter.
22nd January 2008 26 by PinkNews.co.uk staff writer The opposition Social Democrats, Greens and Left party claim the government has had ample time to bring forward legislation. However the coalition says it is committed to negotiating a common position. The Christian Democrats condemned any attempt by the opposition to "steamroller" the government. In January 2007 the Church of Sweden, which was disestablished in 2000, began offering religious blessings to gay unions and actively welcomed LGBT clergy. While the Church's initial reaction to be bill was to declare it would prefer "marriage" to be a term reserved from heterosexual union, last month it approved the "gender neutral" proposal. "The Church of Sweden's central board says yes to the proposal to join the legislation for marriages and partnerships into a single law," the Church said in December. Some priests may opt out of performing same-sex ceremonies. They can currently decline to marry divorced people as long as another priest agress to perform the ceremony. Approximately 75% of the population are members of the Church of Sweden, a Lutheran denomination. However, only 2% regularly attend services.
6th February 2008 27 by PinkNews.co.uk staff writer MSM infections rose from 50 cases in 2006 to 80 in 2007. "Interest in HIV/AIDS has gradually declined as people have become more accustomed to the threat," Claes Herlitz, an expert in Swedish attitudes to HIV, told AFP. "They've seen that HIV hasn't spread as quickly as we thought it would in the late 80s, and there are new medicines making it more difficult to get AIDS. Fewer people are dying." In the UK the Health Protection Agency revealed in November that the number of gay and bisexual men diagnosed with HIV in the UK is at its highest rate since the start of the epidemic. 2,700 gay and bisexual men were newly diagnosed last year, the highest number ever. Across the UK 1 in 20 gay and bisexual men are now living with HIV and estimates suggest this figure is as high as 1 in 10 in London. Furthermore, nearly half (47 per cent) of HIV infected gay men who visit a sexual health clinic leave without being tested for HIV. Overall diagnoses in the UK remain high. 7,800 people were diagnosed last year, and the numbers living with HIV in the UK were 73,000 by the end of 2006. One in three people do not know they are infected. If rates continue the National AIDS Trust says that by 2010 there will be 100,000 people living with HIV in the UK. The report also reveals worrying findings among young people with 1 in 10 (11 per cent) new diagnoses last year among 16 to 24 years old.
10 May 08 28 A homosexual couple has taken the Swedish tax authority (Skatteverket) to court for registering their marriage in Canada as a partnership. "The tax authorities can make an exception for a marriage where one party is under-age but not for homosexuals," said Lars Gårdfeldt to Svenska Dagbladet. Skatteverket confirms that it does make exceptions to Swedish law with regard to under-age couples legally married overseas. But only for marriages involving a man and woman. The Supreme Administrative Court decided on Friday to try the case and rule on whether the Gothenburg couple should be registered as married. Lars Gårdfeldt called the court's decision "historic" and hopes that the court's decision to take up the case will lead to them becoming Sweden's first officially married same-sex couple. The couple had previously been rejected by both the county administrative court and the court of appeal. According to current Swedish law same-sex couples can only register their relationship as a partnership. Due to differences of opinion among the parties within the Alliance government, a proposal to grant same-sex couples the right to register their marriage remains stalled in the Ministry of Justice, reports Svenska Dagbladet. Peter Vinthagen Simpson (news@thelocal.se/+46 8 656 6518)
May 28, 2008 29 by Tony Grew "Our Polish lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender friends face harsh resistance both in politics and as individuals," said Jonah Nylund, president of Stockholm Pride. It is therefore important that we support Equality Foundation, the arrangers of Warsaw Pride, both financially and by our own presence." Polish courts and the European Court of Human Rights have found bans on pride events in Polish cities in 2004 and 2005 to be unlawful. The 2007 Warsaw parade drew a record 5,000 supporters and little protest, and a smaller march in Krakow went forward without major incident. "International support gives us the strength and courage to carry on our work and makes the whole event possible," said Marcin Sroczynski, coordinator of Warsaw Pride. We hope this year's festivities with the film festival will be successful and contribute to Poland's progress on our way towards normalcy." This summer Stockholm Pride is hosting EuroPride from July 25th to August 3rd. Warsaw Pride website: www.paradarownosci.pl For further information about Stockholm Pride and the solidarity fund: www.stockholmpride.or
June 6, 2008 30 by Tony Grew
The International Gay/Lesbian (GLBT) AA Convention has been organised by Gay AA in Stockholm and is not affiliated with EuroPride. Recovering alcoholics from Canada, USA, France, Australia, Japan, Finland and Brazil are expected to attend. "SoberPride is not only for everyone coming to EuroPride who wants to stay connected with AA, but also for everyone interested in living sober," organisers said on their website. "SoberPride is for everyone who absolutely insists on enjoying Pride (and everything in life) sober! Everyone is welcome: gay, lesbian, trans, straight, bisexual, queer. The meetings and workshops are lead by sober people who identify as gay, lesbian or bisexual. Alcoholics Anonymous does not discriminate on any level. Our common welfare comes first; personal recovery depends on AA unity. SoberPride brings together the international community in recovery, with fun and fellowship, enjoying EuroPride sober!"
July 23, 2008 31 by T'Kisha George The 2006 EuroPride parade in London attracted 500,000 spectators. The festival's "Swedish Sin, Breaking Borders" theme focuses on international LGBT issues with guest speeches by Sweden's EU Affairs Minister Cecilia Malmstrom, Indian Prince Mavendra Singh Gohil and gender science professor Tiina Rosenberg. " The theme has two aims," said Jonah Nylund, president of Stockholm Pride. One is to show pride over the progress made in Sweden for homosexuals, bisexuals and transgenders. The other is to highlight the problems in the rest of the world, mainly in Eastern Europe where gay Pride events are banned and attacked time and time again. Malmstrom participated in a Pride seminar and parade in Warsaw in 2007 and was active in the EU parliament?'s work group for LGBT-issues during her time in Brussels. "I am proud to represent a government who wants to be a strong voice for the rights of LGBT-people," she told Stockholm Pride. "I will speak about human rights and that they are universal and that it?s depressing that LGBT-people rights? are violated in Europe today.?" Mavendra Singh Gohil revealed he was homosexual in 2006. He is the president of an Indian HIV organisation and one of very few openly gay people in India. "We have chosen Mavendra Singh Gohil because he can give EuroPride visitors an image of the situation for LGBT-people in other parts of the world,"? said Nylund. Europride begins on Friday at the Skansen open-air museum with a popular sing-along event. Over the ten days, there will be special film screenings, museum exhibitions, seminars and parties, and the parade through the city on August 2nd.
July 28, 2008 32 by Staff Writer, PinkNews.co.uk The couple, who are 25 and 30, were targeted because they are gay, the police added. 17,000 people are in the Swedish capital for EuroPride 2008. The 'Swedish Sin, Breaking Borders' themed event has attracted members of the LGBT community from across the world. Europride began on Friday at the Skansen open-air museum with a popular sing-along event. Over ten days, there will be special film screenings, museum exhibitions, seminars and parties. There will be special appearances by Sweden's EU Affairs Minister Cecilia Malmstrom, Indian Prince Mavendra Singh Gohil and gender science professor Tiina Rosenberg. More than 100,000 are expected to take part in the parade on Saturday. There will be gay choirs, teacher's unions, political parties, emergency services and even gay allotment gardeners. The Swedish fire brigade will be at the parade for the first time. The 2006 EuroPride parade in London attracted 500,000 spectators.
33 Princely charms aside, Manvendra is breaking fresh ground in promoting the interests of gays globally. In a conference chamber in Stockholm's regal Grand Hotel, the mild-mannered Manvendra told IANS: "If the gay movement needs a paradise, Sweden is the place, the veritable Valhalla. "Here, I have seen the incredible: members of the parliament, cabinet and people from socio-religio-political spheres, replete with multi-gender proclivities, hobnob without the blinking of an eye." The StockhomPride, a 10-day event ending Sunday, was a unique combination of politics and partying. This year's theme was "Swedish Sin, Breaking Borders", with the focus going beyond the Swedish borders on the situation for LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) people. "In India, the hypocrisy and, worse, the cowardice is nauseating. In our parliament and state legislatures, homosexuality is, and has always been, rampant," said Manvendra. "But when we (the gay movement) strive to overturn a senseless law, will any single one of these stand up and support the proposal?" "The draconian IPC section 377 (making homosexuality a crime) has no bearing on the reality of our times, leave alone the times when it was imposed upon an unsuspecting public. Unsuspecting because the illiterate masses were attuned to following official diktats without a word, and those who could understand were too cowardly to raise a voice," said Manvendra. When asked what could be done, Manvendra mischievously pointed to the many Swedes swooning over him and said: "Get our presence felt in the legislatures of India, starting with the Rajya Sabha, Lok Sabha, the state legislatures and down the line." Asked how a homosexual candidate could possibly be fielded in a sexually prejudiced society, he said with a twinkle in his eye: "There are ways to go about it. Get yourself elected and then show the rainbow colours (the gay plumage)! But we would never wish to hide behind subterfuge." Manvedra himself has been approached several times to stand as a political candidate. "Caring people like K. Sujata Rao, (director-general of India's AIDS body NACO) have urged me, but I have not yet felt ready to abandon the field work I an engaged in fulltime. "I am all for representation for our harassed community. Mind you, it is by no means a minority community. Our sheer volume and weight can, and will be, effectively harnessed as our community inexorably makes itself seen, heard and felt." Incidentally, the Indian capital fielded its first gay pride event in June. "Also I feel that others, like my most revered mentor and friend, the most heroically outspoken champion of gay rights in India, Ashok Row Kavi, merit the order of precedence," explains Manvendra. "With his social clout he could flush out many a crypto gay parliamentarian and assorted establishment icons into open." |