News
Organization for American States backs anti-discrimination resolution
Advocates applaud inclusion of LGBT-specific language

Wilson CastaƱeda of the Colombian LBGT advocacy group Caribe Afirmativo. attended the OAS meeting in Guatemala. (Washington Blade photo by Michael K. Lavers)
The Organization of American States on June 5 adopted an anti-discrimination resolution that includes sexual orientation and gender identity and expression.
āEvery human being is equal under the law and has the right to equal protection against all forms of discrimination and intolerance in whatever aspect of public or private life,ā it reads.
The resolution the OAS adopted during its annual meeting that took place in Antigua, Guatemala, also said member countries have an obligation to prevent āall acts and demonstrations of discrimination and intolerance.ā These include hate and bias-motivated violence and using the Internet and other media to incite āhate, discrimination and intoleranceā against marginalized groups.
OAS delegates approved a second resolution that calls upon the organizationās 35 member countries to promote and protect the human rights of those living with or affected by HIV/AIDS. They also approved a third resolution that urged nations to stop discrimination based on race.
Anti-LGBT discrimination and especially violence remain serious problems in the hemisphere in spite of recent advances on same-sex marriage and other issues in countries that include Brazil and Uruguay.
A report that Colombia Diversa, a Colombian LGBT rights group, released last month indicates 58 of the reported 280 LGBT Colombians who were murdered between 2011-2012 were killed because of their sexual orientation or gender identity and expression. A separate report from the Latin American and Caribbean Network of Transgender Women (REDLACTRANS) notes 61 transgender women in Colombia have been reported murdered between 2005-2011.
The Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays (J-FLAG) said at least 30 gay men have been murdered in the Caribbean country between 1997 and 2004.
The U.S. State Department has spoken out against anti-LGBT violence in Jamaica and other countries that include Honduras and PerĆŗ.
The Jamaica Supreme Court later this month is scheduled to hear the first domestic challenge to the islandās anti-sodomy law. The Belize Supreme Court last month heard a case that gay advocate Caleb Orozco filed against the former British colonyās statute that criminalizes consensual same-sex sexual acts between adults.
Trinidad and Tobago and Barbados are among the nine other English-speaking Caribbean countries in which anti-sodomy laws remain on the books.
Wilson CastaƱeda Castro, director of Caribe Afirmativo, a Colombian LGBT advocacy group that works in cities along the countryās Caribbean coast, attended the OAS meeting in Guatemala.
He told the Washington Blade earlier this week his group welcomes the anti-discrimination resolutions.
āThis has been a triumph for the regionās LGBT and Afro-descendent movement,ā CastaƱeda said.
Jaime Parada Hoyl, who became the first openly gay political candidate elected in Chile last October when he won a seat on the municipal council in a wealthy enclave in Santiago, the countryās capital, described the resolutions to the Blade as āhistoric.ā
Kenya
Kenyan advocacy groups launch LGBTQ voter mobilization campaign
As Kenya prepares for next yearās August general election, local queer rights groups have joined Gen Zers in also mobilizing their members to register as voters.
The groupsā drive began ahead of the electoral commissionās official launch of a one-month nationwide mass voter registration on March 30, targeting 6.5 million new voters to bring the total to more than 28 million.
The groups ā led by the Initiative for Equality and Non-Discrimination (INEND) and Galck+ ā note that politics is not optional, but rather it is āour responsibilityā to use the ballot to put an end to bad leadership and discriminatory laws against them.Ā
āVoting is one of the most powerful ways we exercise our autonomy and remind the State that our human rights are not āWestern importsā; our struggles for housing, employment, safety, and dignity are fundamentally Kenyan issues,ā INEND states.
It reminds queer individuals that the nation entrusts them with an identity card at age 18 as a recognition of their ability to make decisions, follow laws, and take responsibility for the countryās future.
INEND also notes that despite this honor, LGBTQ people get kicked out of their homes due to homophobia, are discriminated against at work, and face violence in public places due to the punitive laws that the same State legislates.
āAs queer Kenyans, our vote matters,ā INEND states. āOur voice belongs in the democratic and governance conversations, and true democracy includes everyone.ā
Some voter mobilization initiatives the queer lobby groups have been using include āQueering the Ballotā Podcasts on civic participation, dubbed āYour Vote is Your Futureā. The topics explored include how laws shape their lives, the relationship between lived experiences of common citizens, discrimination fatigue, distrust in government systems, and voter apathy.
The groups through the mobilization drive hope to create a queer voting bloc to actively participate in restructuring and reconstructing the existing governance system they argue has been a problem for them. They maintain the queer community navigates a system that was not built for them from its questioning of their right to exist, yet the Kenyan Constitution clearly states that no citizen should be discriminated against based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
The Court of Appeal next month will hear a case challenging the constitutionality of provisions in Kenyaās Penal Code that criminalize consensual same-sex relationships among adults. The appeals court postponed the case after adjourning on Feb. 4, its first substantive hearing since the High Court judgement in 2019.
āChange requires more than pointing fingers. It requires reflection, action, and showing up, especially at the ballot box as LGBTQ Kenyan citizens and declaring that this is our country, our business, and we can no longer watch from the sidelines,ā INEND states.
The group notes that they want a governance system that embraces queer people as they go about their daily lives without any form of homophobic discrimination, harassment, or arrests.Ā Queer people are therefore urged to pick the right leaders who listen to them in Kenyaās six elective positions, from the president down to the local government representatives, as their decisions while in power affect them.Ā
āIt is very irresponsible for any human being, even around the world, to assume that they donāt have political responsibility. It is easy and sounds fancy to say āI donāt like politics,ā but it does not make one good as it makes one abandon their political responsibility as a citizen,ā INEND states.
The groups are also concerned with the existing homophobia among Kenyans, especially whenever they join them in street protests against the governmentās punitive measures or advocating for change. However, they maintain that the LGBTQ community wonāt be left behind despite being marginalized in society, yet they are the most affected group when the government raids peopleās pockets for taxes.
āNow we are moving from the margins to the centre of this political conversation early enough to ensure that our community sees the sense because if we live in a country that doesnāt work, we will be the most affected,ā INEND states.
INEND, with the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission and Galck+, last November launched the second Queering the Ballot Campaign and the 2024 Situation Report on queer participation in Kenyaās democracy.
The report surveyed 14 of the countryās 47 local governments, whose key findings affirm that queer Kenyans are not outsiders to democracy but its heartbeat.
āThe title āOur Vote, Our Future: LGBTQ+ Inclusion in Democratic and Governance Processesā in Kenya is an ode to the spirit of the queer movement in Kenya; unshaken in the face of adversity, determined in its pursuit of justice, and unrelenting in demand to be seen, heard and counted in democratic and political processes,ā reads the report forwarded by former Chief Justice Willy Mutunga.
The report calls on Parliament, the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, the County Assemblies, and every Kenyan to make inclusion not symbolic but systemic.
District of Columbia
Mayor Bowser signs bill requiring insurers to cover PrEP
āThis is a win in the fight against HIV/AIDSā
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser on March 20 signed a bill approved by the D.C. Council that requires health insurance companies to cover the costs of HIV prevention or PrEP drugs for D.C. residents at risk for HIV infection.
Like all legislation approved by the Council and signed by the mayor, the bill, called the PrEP D.C. Amendment Act, was sent to Capitol Hill for a required 30-day congressional review period before it takes effect as D.C. law.
Gay D.C. Council member Zachary Parker (D-Ward 5) last year introduced the bill.
Insurance coverage for PrEP drugs has been provided through coverage standards included in the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. But AIDS advocacy organizations have called on states and D.C. to pass their own legislation requiring insurance coverage of PrEP as a safeguard in case federal policies are weakened or removed by the Trump administration, which has already reduced federal funding for HIV/AIDS-related programs.
Like legislation passed by other states, the PrEP D.C. Amendment Act requires insurers to cover all PrEP drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Studies have shown that PrEP drugs, which can be taken as pills or by injection just twice a year, are highly effective in preventing HIV infection.
āI think this is a win for our community,ā Parker said after the D.C. Council voted unanimously to approve the bill on its first vote on the measure in February. āAnd this is a win in the fight against HIV/AIDS.ā Ā
Vice President JD Vance and his wife, second lady Usha Vance, will visit Hungary next week.
An announcement the White House released on Thursday said the Vances will be in Budapest, the Hungarian capital, from April 7-8.
JD Vance āwill hold bilateral meetings withā Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor OrbĆ”n. The announcement further indicates the vice president āwill also deliver remarks on the rich partnership between the United States and Hungary.ā
The Vances will travel to Hungary less than a week before the countryās parliamentary elections take place on April 12.
OrbƔn, who has been in office since 2010, and his Fidesz-KDNP coalition government have faced widespread criticism over its anti-LGBTQ crackdown.
The Associated Press notes polls indicate OrbƔn is trailing PƩter Magyar and his center-right Tisza party.
-
District of Columbia4 days agoāOut for McDuffieā event held at D.C. gay bar
-
Theater5 days agoāJonahā an undeniably compelling but unusual memory play
-
Movies5 days agoThe Oscar-losing performance thatās too good to miss
-
The White House4 days agoThousands attend ‘No Kings’ protests in D.C.
