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On August 4, 2007 representatives of the Gay Homeland Foundation (GHF)
will call on several consulates located in Cologne and hand over letters
petitioning for decriminalization of homosexuality in Gambia, Malaysia,
Nepal, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunesia.
The Foundation welcomes the decision of Gay activists in Caracas, Cologne,
Mexico City, San Diego, San Francisco, Stockholm, Warsaw, Washington and
Vancouver to initiate actions on this Global Gay Solidarity Day, which
hopefully will become a good tradition and will give fresh dynamics to the
Gay movement in the next years. With some 300 millions Gay individuals
worldwide there is much potential for interconnection and joint action.
GHF is pleased to see various Gay organizations and activists now standing
united to express Gay solidarity. Despite all disagreements over singular
issues, Gays still are one people, and in decisive moments they must stick
together and confront the adversary in a close formation.
The Global Gay Solidarity Day shall serve as a reminder that while
homophobia is imposed upon Gay people by others, there are also many
things which Gays can make for other Gays by own efforts. The Global Gay
Solidarity Day symbolically expresses the powerfull potential Gays have as
a people, the solidarity itself shall be lived throughout the entire year
as well.
Their oppressors of Gay people speculate that Gays will abstain from
assisting their brothers and sisters from other countries, declaring such
persecution to be within the sole competency of the responsible government.
GHF rejects such argumentation as frivolous. Persecution of Gay people in
any given country is not an internal affair of the persecuting state, it
is an assault on the Gay people in its entirety. Appeals to the national
souvereignty are not a legitimate argumentation when it comes to violation
of human rights. Gay citizens of these states are belonging to the Gay
people, thus the worldwide Gay community shall no longer accept such
infringements of safety and cultural freedoms of Gay people, wherever they
occure.
When a country is interested in good relations to all peoples and nations,
it shall respect all these peoples and nations.
Criminalization of family life and disruption of cultural events of
members of a particular minority is certainly not a suitable way to
establish good international relations.
Persecuting countries shall be put before the option to abandon their laws
criminalizing homosexuality, or be subjected to an embargo by countries
belonging to "the free world." The governments of western democracies must
otherwise explain to Gay people why expropriation of private property is a
sufficient reason for an embargo, but severe persecution of Gay people is
not. Governments of the countries posing as human rights defenders must
explain to Gay people how it is possible for them to be friends with
governments determied to exterminate Gays from their populations.
The United Nations must address the Gay issue immediately. No other people
is persecuted as fiercefully in so many states as the Gay people, and no
other violation of human rights is as readily overlooked by the majourity
of UN member states. The state sanctioned persecution of Gays often
amounts to cultural and physical genocide as specified by the
corresponding UN convention, and it must not be tolerated by the UN
anymore. Unlike the poverty issue, this one does not cost billions of
dollars and does not require complicated infrastructure programs. All it
takes for the concerned governments is to rewrite few passages of their
legislations.
To the knowledge of GHF, Gay people are persecuted by criminal legislation
in the following countries: Afghanistan, Algeria, Antigua and Barbuda, the
Bahamas, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Barbados, Bhutan, Botswana, Brunei
Darussalam, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic
Republic of Congo, Dominica, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Fiji, Gabon,
Gambia, Ghana, Grenada, Guinea, Guyana, India, Iran, Iraq, Jamaica, Kenya,
Kiribati, Kuwait, Lebanon, Lesotho, Libya, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives,
Mauritania, Mauritius, Morocco, Myanmar, Namibia, Nauru, Nepal, Nicaragua,
Niger, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Panama, Papua New Guinea,
Qatar, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Seychelles, Singapore, the Solomon
Islands, Somalia, Sri Lanka, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent
and the Grenadines, Sudan, Swaziland, Syria, Tanzania, Togo, Tonga,
Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uganda, United Arab
Emirates, Uzbekistan, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Gays can be subjected to the death penalty in Afghanistan, Iran,
Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
The Gay Homeland Foundation renews its appeal to the international
community to cease deporting Gay and Lesbian asylum-seekers to persecuting
countries, and to consider instead the establishment of a
self-administered territory for the Gay and Lesbian people.

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