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Welcome to Call to Decision

November 8, 2007 | Volume 10, Number 47 |
Dear
Colleague,
We report today
on yet another racial social initiative launched this week
at UN headquarters. A number of governments and UN officials
endorsed a radical homosexual document they hope to foist on
the General Assembly and the Member States of the UN.
Spread the word.
Yours sincerely,
Austin Ruse
President
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Argentina, Brazil and
Uruguay Launch Radical
Homosexual Rights Document
By Samantha
Singson
(NEW
YORK — C-FAM) At a meeting at UN headquarters this week, a
coalition of NGOs and the governments of Argentina, Brazil
and Uruguay hosted the New York launch of a document which
seeks to advance homosexual rights at the national and
international levels. Boris Dittrich, advocacy director for
the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender program at Human
Rights Watch and moderator of the event stated that this
document was the “Magna Carta for human rights in the
areas of sexual orientation and gender identity.”
Called the Yogyakarta
Principles , the document lists human rights that
already exist in binding international law such as the right
to life and freedom from torture, and reinterprets each one
to include homosexual rights. Based on the tenet of
non-discrimination, the Principles assert that nations are
legally bound to change their constitutions and penal codes
to incorporate homosexual rights, including rights to
same-sex unions and gay adoption.
According to the Principles,
“Sexual orientation is understood to refer to each
person’s capacity for profound emotional, affectional
[sic] and sexual attraction to, and intimate and sexual
relations with, individuals of a different gender or the
same gender or more than one gender.” The document
states that “gender identity is understood to refer to
each person’s deeply felt internal and individual
experience of gender, which may or may not correspond with
the sex assigned at birth.”
Panelist Mary Robinson, former UN
High Commissioner for Human Rights and signatory to the
Yogyakarta Principles, praised the document for addressing a
“deficit in the human rights system” that does not
adequately address discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity, which she argues are
“core human rights issues.”
Though she was not present at the
meeting, a letter from current UN High Commissioner on Human
Rights Louise Arbour was distributed at the meeting in
support of the Yogyakarta Principles. Arbour reiterates her
office’s commitment to promoting and protecting sexual
orientation and gender identity and states that “Excluding
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons
from equal protection violates international human rights
law as well as the common standards of humanity that define
us all.”
Pro-family UN experts note that not
a single UN human rights treaty mentions sexual orientation
and furthermore, UN member states have repeatedly rejected
attempts by Brazil and the EU to pass resolutions promoting
broad homosexual rights.
The panelists strongly encouraged
government delegations to use the Yogyakarta Principles
throughout the UN system and as a guide for all future
programs and work. Dittrich praised the government of the
Netherlands for already using the Principles to help
determine development aid. To help more countries
follow the Netherlands example, the organizers announced
that an activist guide on the Yogyakarta Principles would be
published in the upcoming weeks.
The event was organized by several
prominent homosexual rights groups such as the International
Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC), the
International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) and Human
Rights Watch.
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Copyright
2007 Permission granted for unlimited
use. Credit required. |

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