1 April, 2008

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Twittering on 2008-04-01

  • learning about bus ads: "the person across from you wants to kiss." #
  • Tuesday’s tyranny! Argh! #
  • Ok! I totally just cut out the "no parking" explanation from the red eye, since I now will have to be watching for different colors! #
  • Ok. Internal mtg done #
  • Another case! Tenacity bites! #
  • So apparently I just got a research discount to the porsh magazine! I don’t WANT it! #
  • I mean Oprah! Ha ha! #

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As a feminist, and the genderqueer person that I am, I am always wanting to support advocacy groups. Knowing the current ED of RVA, I share the following:

RVA Organization of the Month at Women & Children First!
Women & Children First, Chicago’s independent, woman-owned feminist bookstore, has chosen Rape Victim Advocates as their April “Organization of the Month!” Print the attached coupon or download it from our website, www.rapevictimadvocates.org, use it any time in April and 10% of your purchase will be donated to RVA!

 

A special thanks to the fabulous folks at Women & Children First for supporting RVA.

Women & Children First Bookstore
5233 N. Clark St.
Chicago, Illinois
(773) 769-9299
www.womenandchildrenfirst.com

 

This bookstore is in my neighborhood and I was just there this past Saturday. I absolutely love it [in as much as I can love an inanimate object!].

RACE FOR A SAFE STATE:

A 5K RUN, WALK AND ROLL

HELP PREVENT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND GIRLS

Thursday, May 1, 2008
4:30 p.m.: Check in
6:30 p.m.: Race starts
Grant Park
Chicago

Register by clicking HERE.   Sign up as an individual or a team.
Adults: $35.00
Youth 13 and under: Free with participating adult

Prizes will be awarded to top three male and female overall finishers, as well as the top finishers in each age group. Top fundraiser will receive two (2) United Airlines tickets to anywhere in the continental U.S. Each participant will receive a t-shirt and goody bag.

Sponsorship packages available - click here to view (PDF). For more information, contact Hilary Ward at (312) 577-2815 or hward@cfw.org.

About the “Race for a Safe State”
To raise awareness about violence against women and girls–regardless of income, age, race, sexual orientation or gender identity–Chicago Foundation for Women hosts the second “Race for a Safe State” on May 1, 2008. Run, walk or roll in wheelchairs through Grant Park. Though the park is a place where too many women and girls do not feel safe, we will gather to demand answers to this question: “What will it take to make Illinois the safest state for all women and girls?” We know part of the answer is you.

Proceeds will support Chicago Foundation for Women’s efforts to give women and girls the opportunity to achieve their potential and live in safe, just and healthy communities.

Volunteers
Interested in volunteering? Click on “REGISTER NOW” above and sign up as a volunteer, or contact Mariah Pearl Cunnick at mcunnick@cfw.org or (312) 577-2827.

In an effort to continue to speak out against the various types of violence, be them interpersonal or otherwise, I thought it would be helpful to share the following Guardian Unlimited and Human Rights Watch Article from 31 March 2008.  Read on friends.

 

THE ISSUE IS TORTURE

By Scott Long, Director, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program

Published in Guardian Unlimited

March 31, 2008

Anyone who has spent, as I have, long hours over two years listening to Iranian tales of torture would know just how the controversy over Mehdi Kazemi’s asylum claim misses the point.

George Galloway says gays are not executed in Iran, just rapists. Peter Tatchell says Galloway spouts “Iranian propaganda”. Neither gets at the gist of Mehdi’s case, or of Britain’s broken obligations with regard to torture under international law.

Let’s start with the facts.

Homosexual conduct in Iran can get you the death penalty. Penetrative sex acts between men can bring death on the first conviction; non-penetrative activity, up to 100 lashes. Women earn floggings on the first three convictions; four strikes and you die.

Iran’s penal code requires four reiterated confessions, or the eyewitness testimony of four “righteous men”, to prove lavat, or sodomy. Yet judges are allowed to guess and infer. Moreover, police helpfully provide the witnesses: raiding a party in Isfahan in May 2007, they brought along four men, presumably righteous, to watch.

Torturing and killing gays is legal in Iran: you don’t need to view the bodies to prove it. International law bars Britain from returning people to the risk of torture. Britain must give gay Iranians asylum.

Yet despite this clarity, confusion hangs over the situation in Iran. Some activists, trying sincerely to help Mehdi, are helping the British government off the hook.

Peter Tatchell is wrong to assert, without real evidence, that gay men are routinely hanged in public; that mass “pogroms” have led to mass executions in recent years; or that fake rape charges are regularly tacked on to charges of consensual homosexual acts. Nor should anyone’s asylum case hinge on such claims. The last documented death sentences for consensual homosexual conduct in Iran were handed down in March 2005. It is not known whether they were carried out. Ramping up the allegations means accepting the government’s exaggerated standards of proof. And it can backfire - against people in Iran.

Europe and the US have seen a public campaign in recent years to identify executions - often random ones - in Iran as killings of gay men. Pictures of the horrific public hanging in Mashhad in 2005 of Ayaz Marhoni and Mahmoud Asgari - convicted, in all likelihood, of the rape of a 13-year-old boy while both were minors - spread virally round the world like a postmodern Pieta. Monstrous, yes: but there is no conclusive evidence that they were gay or that consensual homosexual acts had anything to do with their judicial killing.

In the months after that, campaigners in the US and Europe repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that hangings for rape in Iran were actually a “pogrom” against gay men. One US paper claimed four men were hanged for “being gay”. They turned out to have been convicted of the rape of a woman and three girls - 10, 7, and 8 years old.

Such mistakes can have dire consequences. In November 2007 in Kermanshah, Makwan Mouloudzadeh, 20, faced the death penalty on false charges of raping several boys seven years before. His accusers retracted their claims. No evidence suggested he had committed any crime under Iranian law.

However, European activists wildly seized on him as another “gay” victim. They organised a mass petition to Ahmadinejad for mercy for “the young Iranian gay”. Their pleas sent an inadvertent message: Makwan was innocent of one capital crime, but Europe believed him guilty of another. On December 5, Makwan Mouloudzadeh, probably neither gay nor a rapist, went to the gallows.

Why so much confusion? Why the need to find “gay” victims, even when it endangers a man already on death row?

Emotion makes discussion difficult. People asking what the evidence really is are likely to be called “apologists for Iran”. Britain’s slammed asylum door indeed breeds desperation. It’s crucial to remember, though, that the reason asylum authorities seek pretexts to reject gay Muslims isn’t “Iranian propaganda”: it’s home-grown propaganda stoking fears of Muslim immigration. Activists must combat racism in Britain, not just repression in Iran.

The most cogent answer, though, shows the failure at the heart of Britain’s policies on asylum - and torture. Home Office minister Lord West said of Mehdi: “We are not aware of any individual who has been executed in Iran in recent years solely on the grounds of homosexuality. And we don’t consider there was systematic persecution of gay men in Iran.”

In other words: no execution, no persecution. If you aren’t dead, you’re OK. This is a disastrous evasion of the UK’s responsibilities under international law.

Human Rights Watch has shown how Britain tries to redefine its obligations on torture, so it can send people back to states where they face grave risk. Usually it happens in the context of counterterrorism. But with gay Iranians, too, the government aims to change the rules, denying that legal torture is “persecution”.

The UK should recognise - as the Netherlands has done - that with a law prescribing death or torture for gay Iranians, they need not demonstrate the details of past persecution. Lift the burden of proof from Mehdi and his gay compatriots. End the threat of deportation.

Activists, though, must avoid playing the government’s torturous game. Don’t let the Home Office define torture down till a corpse on a gallows is the only proof that counts. Hold Britain to its real obligations. Otherwise, it will remain complicit in persecution.

More of Human Rights Watch’s work on LGBT Rights:
http://www.hrw.org/doc/?t=lgbt

More of Human Rights Watch’s work on Iran:
http://www.hrw.org/doc?t=mideast&c=iran
———–

Please help support the research that made this bulletin possible. In order
to protect our objectivity, Human Rights Watch does not accept funding from
any government. We depend entirely on the generosity of people like you.
To make a contribution, please visit https://donate.hrw.org/member

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