Nepali gays celebrate
Valentine's Day
in public square
Dozens of GLT people celebrated Valentine's Day with a public demonstration in Nepal's prominent Basantapur Durbar Square in central Katmandu.
The day will henceforth also be known as Pink Triangle Day in Nepal, the activists said.
"Our community needs more than one celebration per year to keep us going and growing," said openly gay Member of Parliament Sunil Babu Pant. "Pink Triangle Day could provide a perfect midwinter lift to our spirits."
Moscow Pride seeks
emergency hearing
Moscow Pride activists went to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France, Feb. 13 to plead for emergency consideration of their languishing cases stemming from Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov's repeated bans of gay pride events over the past three years.
The group also joined with around 50 local activists to stage a public protest in which one banner read, "Need there be deaths at Moscow gay pride for the European Court to react?"
When gays have staged unauthorized pride events in Moscow, in spite of Luzhkov's bans, they have been beaten by anti-gay protesters and police.
During a week of lobbying, the Moscow delegation also held meetings with representatives of the Council of Europe ( CoE, which oversees the court ) , members of the European Parliament, and human rights officials from the European Commission.
"Meetings at the CoE were tough," said Moscow Pride founder Nikolai Alekseev. "It was in fact the unpleasant surprise of all this trip. At the CoE, we were told, basically, to put less pressure, that we have to wait, that in several years things will change, that they work 'hard' to make it evolve."
"There is a clear gap between Strasbourg and what people suffer in the whole of Europe," he said. "By staying global, this organization does not act locally. We all got the impression that the CoE is completely powerless in front of Russia."
The activists also staged a demonstration at UN headquarters in Geneva and met with officials from the UN Human Rights Commission.
"One of the conclusions we made after our meeting with this institution is that there is a gap between what we, as activists, face in our countries and what they usually know," said Nikolai Baev, a member of the Russian delegation.
Luzhkov has called gay pride parades "satanic" and "weapons of mass destruction," and said he will never allow them in Moscow.
Phelpses banned
from entering UK
Anti-gay Kansas pastor Fred Phelps and his daughter Shirley have been banned from entering the United Kingdom, the Telegraph reported Feb. 19.
The "God hates fags" team had announced plans to picket a performance of The Laramie Project on Feb. 20 at a school arts center in Basingstoke, Hampshire.
A UK Border Agency spokesman said: "Both these individuals have engaged in unacceptable behavior by inciting hatred against a number of communities. ... We will continue to stop those who want to spread extremism, hatred and violent messages in our communities from coming to our country."
In an interview with the BBC, Shirley Phelps-Roper stated: "There are members of WBC ( Westboro Baptist Church ) that are not named Phelps. ... Unless they intend to begin checking the bare backsides of every person coming into that country to find that tattoo that says 'Property of WBC,' they will have no way of identifying who is from WBC."
In the end, a single, unidentified demonstrator showed up and was chased off by about 50 counterprotesters, the BBC reported.
Burundi plan to
ban gay sex
dies in Senate
A move to ban gay sex in the Central African nation of Burundi was rejected by the Senate Feb. 16 after having passed the National Assembly unanimously in November.
"Burundi's Senate, after significant pressure and 'heated debate,' today rejected the proposed amendment to criminalize homosexual conduct. Victory—for the moment," said Scott Long, head of Human Rights Watch's LGBT Rights Division.
The proposal, part of a much larger bill, set a punishment of between three months and two years in prison, along with a large fine, for engaging in consensual adult gay sex.
The Senate and Assembly must now form a commission to reconcile the two versions of the bill before sending it to President Pierre Nkurunziza.
"Any reconciliation could, potentially, reinstate the provision criminalizing same-sex conduct," said the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. "Whatever the outcome, the fact that the majority of senators voted against the provision shows a growing recognition that all citizens are entitled to the full enjoyment of human rights irrespective of their sexual orientation."
Eighty-four of the world's 195 nations ban gay sex.
—Assistance: Bill Kelley