Saturday, 18 September 2010

Section 377 UpDated ?

 

Section 377 :- Lesbians Sllege illegal detention at Police Station ?
CHENNAI: A lesbian couple was allegedly harassed by cops at Tiru-Vika Nagar police station on Monday. Kavitha (19), a resident of Tiru-Vika Nagar reportedly left home to live with her lesbian partner, Malathi (34) on August 6 but was later summoned to the police station after her parents lodged a missing complaint.

Side Effectts of Legalizing GAYSEX Will Destroy Social Fabric in INDIA ?
Huge Financial Corruption in MsmCBO or NGO in INDIA Encourages by NACO and others ?

The police had assured her that she could leave after she signed a statement. However, when she reported at the station, the police forced her to go back home with her parents. "She does not want to go back to her parents as they have been trying to get her married," Shiva, the state co-ordinator of Sangaman, an NGO working for the rights of gays and lesbians told The Times of India.
Hjiras,Gandu’s,MsM,Kinar,Aravanies,6no’s,Mamu & Dogs Not Allowed ??
However, assistant commissioner of Sembium, M Kingslin, said the allegations were false and the police had not forced her to do anything against her wish. "She said she wished to live in an ashram in Mylapore, and we will take her there," Kingslin said.

According to the NGO, 25 days after her left her parents' home to live with her partner Malathi, her parents lodged a missing complaint with the Tiru-Vika Nagar police. The parents, who were also summoned to the station on Monday, tried to forcefully take her back home but to no avail. They also sought the help of the police in getting their daughter to go back with them.

NGO members claimed that the police refused to listen to the girl, even though she was a major. Instead, they chose to assist her parents.

"Police have no role in this issue. Kavitha is a major and she has the right to choose her life. However, they tried to a trap her into leaving with her parents. They tried to emotionally harass the woman," Shiva said.

The police had detained the couple from noon till 10.30 p.m. When they failed to convince the girl to leave with her parents, they let her go to the ashram.
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In a shocking case, a private school van driver has been arrested in Prasad Nagar here for allegedly sexually abusing a minor school girl and her two brothers for the past two and a half months.

The 12-year-old girl was allegedly raped and her brothers aged 10 and seven were allegedly sodomised by the driver Lalit Ratawal and four of his accomplices.








“While the medical report of the girl confirmed rape, sodomy charges are yet to be confirmed,” said Deputy Commissioner of Police (Central) Jaspal Singh.
The accomplices are all juvenile.



According to Mr. Singh, the 38-year-old driver was engaged to drop the children to school in his van. He said the children had alleged that they were regularly taken to an unspecified location and sexually abused. The children also alleged that they were drugged by the accused and an MMS clip was also made, he added.




The children were reportedly taken to the house of one of the juveniles while his parents were away at work and abused.
The police are yet to confirm the allegations.




The family approached a local politician, Subhash Naagar, on Thursday who contacted the police. The children's father had died about one and a half years ago and the mother, a housewife, ran the household by renting out three of their rooms, said Mr. Naagar.


“The children were warned that their mother would be killed if they told anyone about the abuse. They finally told their mother around 25 days ago. The mother stopped sending them to school but kept quiet fearing further harm from the driver. The mother contacted me on Thursday and I took appropriate action,” he said.





The driver was arrested on Friday. The police have registered a case under Section 376 of the Indian Penal Code. “If sodomy charges are proved, a case would be registered under Section 377. We will also involve a non-government organisation to provide proper counselling to the family,” Mr. Singh said.

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Indonesian clerics ban sex-change ops

Indonesian clerics ban sex-change ops



Indonesian transvestites are pictured next to a shop in Jakarta. Photograph: AFP

JAKARTA - Indonesia's highest Islamic body has issued a fatwa banning Muslims from watching gossip shows or having sex-change operations, an official said Wednesday.

The increasingly assertive Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) said gossip shows about the intimate details of people's private lives -- a popular genre on Indonesian television -- were immoral and threatened society.

"We considered it important to pass the fatwa as infotainment programmes may contain immoral material and violate the journalistic code of ethics," MUI official Asrorun Niam Soleh said.

"We're not against all infotainment programmes... What's haram (forbidden) is material that's gossipy and exposes shameful details about people.

"When people start spreading rumours, the joints holding a nation together will be crushed."
Profiting from infotainment shows is also forbidden under the edict, posing a theological conundrum for the media industry in the world's most populous Muslim-majority country.

Gossip shows are allowed only if they "uphold the law, warn the public and help people", Soleh said.

The ruling will be presented to the Indonesian Broadcasting Commission as a guideline for future infotainment programmes, he added.

Another fatwa passed at an MUI meeting late Tuesday forbade receiving or conducting a sex-change operation unless there is a good medical reason.

The council is the top Islamic authority in Indonesia and while its edicts are usually ignored, they can be cited by religious hardliners to justify vigilante-style crackdowns on "un-Islamic" activities.

It has recently issued a steady stream of fatwas including bans on inter-faith marriages, smoking and yoga.

It was forced into an embarrassing apology earlier this month when it corrected a fatwa ordering Muslims to pray to the west, when in fact the Islamic holy sites in Saudi Arabia are northwest of Indonesia.

Rajawali Citra Televisi Indonesia programming head Banardi Rachmad said the edict on celebrity gossip shows was confusing and the station would continue to produce and broadcast such content.

"We'll continue broadcasting infotainment programmes but we'll evaluate the content and see how to improve it," he said.

"What's fact to us could be deemed as lies by others, how do we know for sure what constitutes a rumour?"

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First transgender to become a  doctor in Pakistan

Islamabad, July 09: If strength, determination and vision are the basic traits of a true leader then Sarah Gill certainly qualifies, as one for she not only has the strength and determination to stand up for the rights of her community, but also has the vision to lobby for centuries' old respect for transgender in society.

A resident of Karachi, Sarah, 23, is going to be the first transgender to become a medical doctor in Pakistan's history. This interview was taken on her recent visit to Islamabad aimed at meeting United Nations officials.

"Our community enjoyed tremendous respect in Islam as well as in the history of Muslim rulers," said Sarah. "It was only after when the British came to this continent that we were declared criminals by law and since then, our community is constantly facing inhuman discrimination and have become a symbol of shame," said Sarah, a soft spoken person with a strong opinion. She regretted that the law made by British was still part of Pakistan's constitution.

Talking about the plight of her community, she said that usually a declared transgender is left with no option, but to indulge in immoral activities for survival. "Due to discrimination and harassment, literacy rate among my community is very low and those who have some educational background fail to find a job." Despite all this social injustice, she said that transgender are never found involved in any criminal activity.

"The original Urdu word for a transgender is 'Murat' that is a combination of 'M' from Urdu word 'Mard' and 'urat' from 'aurat'. We call each other by this name," she said.

Sarah is currently studying medicine and is in fourth year at Jinnah Medical and Dental College, Karachi. "My family warned me that if declare myself as transgender, they will stop paying for my studies. Now I will have to arrange for my next year's fee on my own," said Sarah, who still attends college as a male student.

"I do not know when I will have my own identity as directed by the Supreme Court," she said adding that the process of registration is extremely slow and is still incomplete even in big cities. "Almost a year has passed since the Supreme Court ordered Nadra to issue special Identity Cards for transgenders, but the authority is still busy in paper work and nothing practical has been done yet. "Majority of transgender community is illiterate and do not know their rights. It is a shocker for government officials when they have to deal with an educated transgender."

She said that her class fellows have clear idea that she was a transgender, but she has not officially declared that before her teachers. "I am sure that I will be kicked out of college if I do that. Due to same discrimination and social pressure, majority of transgender tend to hide their identity and live like men throughout their lives," she pointed out.

Sharing her experiences, Sarah said that from her childhood, she was always attracted towards girly things. She said that to be declared as a transgender, a certificate is needed from a psychologist. "I decided to go for this test two years back despite severe criticism from my family. "My family tried their best to convince the doctor not to declare me as transgender," she said.

"They insisted that I pose as a boy throughout my life despite knowing that I am not. They said that I am selfish and not considering the respect that the family would lose after I declare myself as transgender. Every transgender has to face the same situation," said Sarah who has also made several suicide attempts to escape social rejection. "A normal person can never understand our state of mind. It is like a soul trapped in a wrong body," she added.

For Sarah, who is also running an NGO by the name of Gender Interactive Alliance (GIA), there is nothing that can stop her now from working openly for the welfare of her community. "I am not ashamed of my sexuality and the best inspiration is that my community needs me," she said.

She requested all public and private sector organisations to provide employment to transgender. "If a man can be popular pretending to be a woman on a TV show then why a real transgender cannot make a career in media," she asked. She also appealed to relevant authorities to speed up the process of registration and start issuing identity cards so that the two per cent quota for transgender can be implemented in the public sector. The news

99% Pakistanis do not want to Be Friend Eunuchs ?

Section 377 :- Side Effectts of Legalizing GAYSEX Will Destroy Social Fabric in INDIA ?
Huge Financial Corruption in MsmCBO or NGO in INDIA Encourages by NACO and others ?
Hjiras,Gandu’s,MsM,Kinar,Aravanies,6no’s,Mamu & Dogs Not Allowed ??

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99% Pakistanis Do Not want to Be Friend Eunuchs ?


60% Pakistanis would not like to be friends with a eunuch. PHOTO: REUTERS
KARACHI: More than 55% of the Pakistani population says that transgendered persons (eunuchs) should have a special quota in educational institutes and offices, although 60% would not like to be friends with them.
The figures are the result of a survey conducted by Gallup Pakistan.
The question “Some people believe that educational institutes and offices should have a specific/ special quota for eunuchs so that like other people they can get educated and earn a living while others do not think so. What is your opinion?” got a 55% positive answer, 25% negative answer, while 20% stated they did not know.
The follow up question “If an eunuch wants to be friends with you, will you agree or not?” got a 60% negative and a 14% positive response overall. According to the surveyors, only 10% of women responded in the positive, while the positive result stood at 17% for men.
The survey also revealed that willingness to be friends with eunuchs also differed by age. It was higher at 21% among people aged 51 and above, while the under 30 population accounted for 13%.
Only recently has the Supreme Court ordered that the transgender community be surveyed, given NICs which specify their gender as ‘other’, given small loans and have access to medical facilities. These ID cards are supposed to be the first step in the transformation of the transgender community from beggars and sex workers on the fringes of society to industrious citizens employed as tailors, beauticians, cooks and health workers contributing to the nation.
The transgender community has also been in the media light in recently
due to the Raani and Iqbal episode.


Malik Iqbal, with Rani, speaks during a news conference at the Peshawar Press Club.
Malik Iqbal, a trader arrested on charges of “marrying a transvestite”, has rejected charges against him, saying that he will move the court against police.
“I wasn’t marrying transvestite Kashif, also known as Rani. He is my tenant. He lives in my apartment building,” Iqbal told journalists at the Peshawar Press Club on Friday, where Rani was also present.
On May 24, police arrested Iqbal and Rani at what was described as the wedding ceremony of the pair. Forty-three other “wedding guests” were also picked up from the site. However, they were released on bail after a week.
Iqbal alleged that some police officials from the Faqirabad police station used to visit his apartment building to watch dance and to extort money from transvestites. Iqbal claimed that he had spoken to the police and asked them to stop harassing his tenants. And the police vilified him in revenge.
Iqbal said that they were picked up when they were celebrating the birthday of Rani. But police dubbed it as a “wedding ceremony” and implicated them in the case to settle scores.
He also regretted that the media played a one-sided role in the whole episode and did not bother to know facts about the incident.
“We are not living in Europe where there is no restriction on gay marriages. We are Muslims and part of a society where gay marriage is tantamount to inviting one’s death,” Iqbal exclaimed.
“I had invited Iqbal to my birthday party. I did not know that police would declare him my husband,” said Rani on her part.
Iqbal and Rani told journalists that they were receiving threats from unknown callers who believe in the story made up by police. Responding to a question, the pair also said that they would welcome any asylum offer from abroad.

Dragging the line

Pakistan's transgender people are ready to play a greater role in mainstream society. How far are we willing to bend our perceptions of gender to accommodate them?
Straddling the roles of mainstream spokesperson and esoteric community leader, Bindiya Rana is both pragmatic and schmaltzy, aiming to persuade you with a mixture of ingratiating patriotism and vague humanism. It’s not hard to understand her draw as a spokesperson for the rights of the Khwaja Siras — transgender people — of Pakistan. Whether at an event organised by the Karachi government or on a television talk show, the President of the Gender Interactive Alliance (GIA) has a confident presence in the media that makes the aspirations of her community seem tantalisingly attainable, if only by glossing over the dividing factors that have kept it at the margins for so long.
The Gender Interactive Alliance is not the only welfare organisation working for the transgender people but it is the one which has made the most of Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry’s interest in the community. Registered some time during the rapid-fire decisions of the Supreme Court that the transgender community be surveyed, given NICs which specify their gender as ‘other’, given small loans and have access to medical facilities, GIA is an emergency helpline of sorts for the transgender community. It provides medical aid to sufferers of Hepatitis and Aids, responds to distress calls from sex workers hounded by thugs, and counsels transgender people to stand up to bullies.
But a holistic vision to integrate transgender people into mainstream society, which GIA has vociferously espoused, is fairly recent and though Iftikhar Chaudhry is the benign face of the revolution, the unlikely originator is an Islamic jurist from Rawalpindi, Mohammad Aslam Khaki.
In Khaki’s hometown of Muzaffargarh, the transgender community has been displaced from its traditional occupations of singing, dancing and commercial sex work, because of increasing Islamisation and the MMA government. After policemen robbed and beat up ‘eunuchs’ at a marriage ceremony in Taxila in January 2009, Khaki made the case for the rights of transgenders in the Supreme Court: the right to dignity, to inheritance, and the right to live with their parents.
The Taxila incident was fairly banal as far as news of the transgender community goes but it served as a useful snapshot of the affliction of the community and of the relations between the ‘eunuchs’ and custodians of the law. Khaki has a clear if simplistic vision for these people — to bring them squarely into mainstream society: “They are people like us so they should be in mainstream society like us. I believe they are the golden asset of the nation because they are not tied down by their families. All they need is two square meals a day, some rest and work. They can run canteens in girls’ colleges, serve as guards in women’s police stations, they can even join the army.”
But mainstreaming might not go as swimmingly as Khaki expects. The very first injunction of the court pertaining to transgender people — to conduct a survey and compile facts and figures – has been difficult to implement. Khaki estimates that there are 80,000 eunuchs in Pakistan, Rana contends that there are 400,000 whereas Almas Bobby, a community leader in Rawalpindi, claims there are 500,000.
“It is nearly impossible to estimate their number because it is a highly mobile population,” says Tahir Khilji, who runs the NGO Vision in Lahore and has been working with transgender people since 1998.
As for the Supreme Court’s call for ID cards for people of ‘other’ gender (“We say thanks to the Chief Justice for this sweet decision,” says Rana), despite the rhetoric, little progress has been made. These ID cards are supposed to be the first step in the transformation of the Khwaja Siras from beggars and sex workers on the fringes of society to industrious citizens employed as tailors, beauticians, cooks and health workers contributing to the nation. “Society does not even give us a name,” says Rana, referring to the fact that Khwaja Siras don’t have ID cards. “Since we don’t have ID cards, we can’t get jobs.” Not entirely true, that. Many transgender people, including, by her own admission, Rana, have ID cards — just not with the correct gender on them.
Foremost on the list of desirable jobs is tax collection from loan defaulters. In a court ruling in November 2009, the Chief Justice, no doubt inspired by the tax collection model in India, suggested that Khwaja Siras be used to get back loans from defaulters. As the media picked up on the story, the suggestion created a stir not only in the hermetic community but in mainstream society. After extensive coverage of the issue, so far the cantonment board has taken 11 transgender people for tax collection with a promise of five more — a paltry number, but one which counts as a victory for Rana. ”We are employed on the same terms as any other contractual employee,” she says.
But not every supporter of transgender rights considers this a call for celebration. Tahir Khilji, who works in community development and helps transgender people realise their full potential fears that the SC judgment, instead of changing attitudes, is actually reinforcing stereotypes. “The idea is that if you want to pile shame on someone, the most potent way is to humiliate him through these people. The tax evader would feel internally ashamed that it is these people who are clapping at him.”
This is an attitude that has been internalised by the Khwaja Siras themselves. One community leader after the SC ruling declared, “If the tax evader is unable to pay up, we will tell him that he too is a Khwaja Sira.”
NADRA has been ordered to make separate identity cards for transgender people but progress has ground to a halt because of one significant caveat: all Khwaja Siras need to undergo a medical check-up before they can sign up as ‘other’. “Their gender needs to be determined on objective medical grounds,” says Khaki. “It’s not enough to simply say that they have a feminine soul.”
“If they want to do a medical test, they can go ahead with it,” says Almas Bobby, a community leader in Rawalpindi. “But nothing is really happening.” But in Karachi, the mood is different. “The Khwaja Siras of Pakistan have unanimously rejected this notion,” says Rana. “No one has the right to tell someone else what they are. I know what I am.”
At the root of their reluctance is the fear that medical examinations will stigmatise them further. Crucially, if the check-up consists of a simple physical examination without accompanying psychological evaluation, then many of these Khwaja Siras — who develop female traits by injecting themselves with hormones — will indeed show up as males — though their gender identity is female.  Another thorny issue: the definition of this third sex is mired in myth and shrouded in mystery. It is a population with subsets that refuse to intermingle and whose nomenclature changes with the region. In Sindh, this community calls itself Khwaja Siras, in Punjab there are Zenanas who anthropologically belong to travelling theatres and circuses, and one subset of this population, which does not mix with any other, are the hijras, who were patronised by the aristocracy and may or may not be castrated.
The proportion of natural hermaphrodites in these populations may be quite low. And while there is a lot of emphasis on ‘sex’, public discussions have adroitly avoided ‘sexuality’. Many homosexuals find refuge in the Khwaja Sira community and the recent ‘marriage’ between a man and a ‘transvestite’ in Peshawer illustrates society’s attitude towards sexual deviants. But Rana is deadpan when she declares, “We are living in an Islamic republic — no Khwaja Sira will want to violate laws and demand a right to marriage.”
Only marginally less surreal is Khaki’s declaration that transgender people have the right to marry people of the ‘opposite’ sex if they have any discernable sexual organs, no matter how malformed.
The third gender NIC has become a benchmark in the struggle for transgender rights but the question is, will that really help them towards bridge-building with mainstream society? Though the media has succeeded in mobilising public sympathy for their cause, in the medium term sharing spaces in education and the job market will be challenging since people in mainstream society are unable to truly appreciate the depth of their problems. The judicial activism of the Supreme Court smacks of ad hocism and though there is a scramble to get things done, the advocates of transgender rights remain blissfully oblivious to the real world problems and a thought process is conspicuous by its absence. While over-optimistic community leaders say that in the next five years no Khwaja Sira will be seen begging on the streets, government officials are accommodating them in jobs on the two per cent  disability quota — an offensive proposition.
Still, there is an optimism stemming from the fact that for the first time, transgender people are sharing spaces with scholars, journalists and politicians in the media. For a traditionally persecuted community, this is a huge positive change and it builds high hopes for the future.
“We are not any different from you people,” says Rana, “we are from amongst your kith and kin.” And despite all the references to vague, overarching ideals and the mawkish delivery, the truth of the statement moves one to agreement.

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

GAYSEX in NEPAL will Destroy Social Fabric in NEPAL SunilPant Arrested ?




KATHMANDU : 
GAYSEX in NEPAL will Destroy 
Social Fabric in NEPAL SunilPant Arrested ?
Police held Constituent Assembly member Sunil Babu Pant, 
who is also the chairman of Nil Hira Samaj, 
along with 58 other LGBTI activists from 
Singha Durbar in the area this afternoon.

They entered the prohibited area while staging a protest in front of the country's main administrative complex demanding smooth issuance of citizenship to the sexual minorities.


According to DSP Pradyumna Kumar Karki at Metropolitan Police Range in Hamumandhoka, the detainees who were kept at Metropolitan Police Sector in Kamalpokhari and Singhadurbar were released after 5 p.m.

Led by Nepal's only openly gay member of parliament Sunil Babu Pant, dozens of homosexuals, lesbians and transgenders began a public demonstration in the capital on Tuesday, announcing a fast unto death to protest against discrimination and homophobia.

The protest is against Home Minister Bhim Rawal who, according to the sexual minorities, has refused to authorise the issuance of identity cards to transgenders though the Supreme Court ordered the government to do so three years ago.

"We have run out of patience," said Pant, who is also the founder of the gay rights movement in Nepal and celebrated a decade of the stir Saturday.

"We are ashamed to have a government whose minister denies citizens a legal ID, which is a fundamental right. You can't survive in Nepal without a legal ID. Third genders can't enrol in college, get jobs or inherit ancestral property. They can't open a bank account or travel. Even being treated in hospital is a problem," Pant said.

In December 2007, Nepal's Supreme Court recognised the community as "natural people" entitled to all the rights heterosexual citizens enjoy. The court also gave the nod to same-sex marriages and ordered the government to draft laws to protect the rights of the community.

Following the landmark judgment, three districts of Banke, Palpa and Kaski issued IDs to five third genders -- people who consider themselves to be of a sex different from the one they were born with.

They have been asking to be recognised as third genders in their state IDs instead of male or female.

However, Pant says the present home minister stopped the issuance of such IDs.
"We had approached the president (Ram Baran Yadav) and the prime minister (Madhav Kumar Nepal)," the MP told IANS. "Both sent letters to the home ministry asking it to speed up matters. But the home minister is still refusing to authorise the IDs."

The current home minister is a controversial politician who had a feud with his deputy, Minister of State Rizvan Ansari, who blamed him for the deteriorating law and order situation in the country.

The feud ended with the prime minister forcing Ansari to resign though Ansari was the only elected MP in the cabinet from the premier's party.

Rawal is now at the centre of a fresh controversy after the caretaker PM drew flak for his earlier decision to lead a jumbo delegation to the UN General Assembly and delegated the home minister to go in his stead.

"It's really a sad case that a minister who denies the rights of the most marginalised people in the country and refuses to implement the decision of the Supreme Court will represent Nepal at the UN meet," Pant said.

Nepal detains activists seeking transgender identification
(Reuters Life!) - More than 70 gay rights activists were detained in the Nepali capital on Tuesday in a crackdown on a rally to demand government identification papers for transgender people, police and activists said.
Nepali men and women who identify themselves as transgender are seeking citizenship certificates with their gender marked as "third sex" instead of male or female.
Sunil Babu Pant, lawmaker and founder of the Blue Diamond Society, a gay rights group, said more than 70 people were detained near the prime minister's office and parliament.
"We are running out of patience and are demanding our rights," Pant told Reuters from a detention centre.
"Without the citizenship papers, the sexual minorities are unable to get a job, enrol in schools or colleges, seek treatment in hospitals and travel," he said. "They cannot even inherit parental property."
In 2007, the Supreme Court ordered the government to amend laws to end discrimination against homosexuals, and give them the same rights as other citizens.
Government officials were not immediately available for comment.
Kathmandu police chief Ramesh Kharel said the activists were detained for "violating the norms" by gathering at a place where demonstrations were not allowed.
Hindu-majority Nepal has become more gay-friendly over the last few years, but homosexuality still remains taboo for many people in this conservative Himalyan nation.
Same-sex marriages have taken place in public and gay beauty contests are held.
A travel agency run by gay people is offering to organise same-sex weddings at Mount Everest in a move to promote the scenic mountainous nation as a gay-friendly tourist destination.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

KATHMANDu: Police held Constituent Assembly member Sunil Babu Pant, who is also the chairman of Nil Hira Samaj, along with 58 other LGBTI activists from Singha Durbar in the area this afternoon.
They entered the prohibited area while staging a protest in front of the country's main administrative complex demanding smooth issuance of citizenship to the sexual minorities.
According to DSP Pradyumna Kumar Karki at Metropolitan Police Range in Hamumandhoka, the detainees who were kept at Metropolitan Police Sector in Kamalpokhari and Singhadurbar were released after 5 p.m.
Led by Nepal's only openly gay member of parliament Sunil Babu Pant, dozens of homosexuals, lesbians and transgenders began a public demonstration in the capital on Tuesday, announcing a fast unto death to protest against discrimination and homophobia.

The protest is against Home Minister Bhim Rawal who, according to the sexual minorities, has refused to authorise the issuance of identity cards to transgenders though the Supreme Court ordered the government to do so three years ago.
"We have run out of patience," said Pant, who is also the founder of the gay rights movement in Nepal and celebrated a decade of the stir Saturday.
"We are ashamed to have a government whose minister denies citizens a legal ID, which is a fundamental right. You can't survive in Nepal without a legal ID. Third genders can't enrol in college, get jobs or inherit ancestral property. They can't open a bank account or travel. Even being treated in hospital is a problem," Pant said.
In December 2007, Nepal's Supreme Court recognised the community as "natural people" entitled to all the rights heterosexual citizens enjoy. The court also gave the nod to same-sex marriages and ordered the government to draft laws to protect the rights of the community.
Following the landmark judgment, three districts of Banke, Palpa and Kaski issued IDs to five third genders -- people who consider themselves to be of a sex different from the one they were born with.
They have been asking to be recognised as third genders in their state IDs instead of male or female.
However, Pant says the present home minister stopped the issuance of such IDs.
"We had approached the president (Ram Baran Yadav) and the prime minister (Madhav Kumar Nepal)," the MP told IANS. "Both sent letters to the home ministry asking it to speed up matters. But the home minister is still refusing to authorise the IDs."
The current home minister is a controversial politician who had a feud with his deputy, Minister of State Rizvan Ansari, who blamed him for the deteriorating law and order situation in the country.
The feud ended with the prime minister forcing Ansari to resign though Ansari was the only elected MP in the cabinet from the premier's party.
Rawal is now at the centre of a fresh controversy after the caretaker PM drew flak for his earlier decision to lead a jumbo delegation to the UN General Assembly and delegated the home minister to go in his stead.
"It's really a sad case that a minister who denies the rights of the most marginalised people in the country and refuses to implement the decision of the Supreme Court will represent Nepal at the UN meet," Pant said.
 

Sunday, 12 September 2010

Cross-dresser in Dubai seeks acquittal of charges

 
Cross-dresser in Dubai seeks Acquittal of charges ??
The 23-year-old student's lawyer Yasser Al Naqbi on Monday asked the Dubai Cassation Court to cancel his client's one-year imprisonment and dismiss his charges.
  • By Bassam Za'Za', Senior Reporter
  • Published: 00:00 September 7, 2010
  • Gulf News
Dubai: An Emirati student, nicknamed Hamdan British, is seeking acquittal from charges of posing as a male prostitute and posting on the internet, indecent pictures of him wearing bikinis and cross-dressed to seduce men.
The 23-year-old student's lawyer Yasser Al Naqbi on Monday asked the Dubai Cassation Court to cancel his client's one-year imprisonment and dismiss his charges.
In July, the Dubai Appeal Court sentenced Hamadan British, identified as MN, to one year in jail.
MN pleaded not guilty and denied all charges before the Courts of Appeal and First Instance.
Not guilty
"My client was unlawfully arrested and detained. Law enforcement procedures were carried out unlawfully against MN. He pleaded not guilty and we are seeking to clear his charges of cross-dressing, posing as a male prostitute, having consensual sex and violating the Quran's sanctity and slandering Islam," argued Al Naqbi in a written defence which he handed to the Cassation Court on Monday.
The Appeals Court reduced MN's primary judgment, three years in jail, to one year.
Prosecutors, who questioned the convict, additionally charged him with posing as a woman and taking pictures of himself wearing women's lingerie and swim wear and posting photographs showing him dressed in women's outfits and wearing make-up.

Wednesday, 8 September 2010

eunuchs' Menace on Trains in INDIA ?


KANPUR: In order to tighten the noose around the eunuchs who 'extort' money from the passengers on trains, additional director general of police (railways) A K Jain has issued a circular asking the GRP officials at Kanpur Central railway station to curb such illegal practices.

Referring to the complaints made by a large number of passengers in the recent past, Jain, in his circular, has said that eunuchs who misbehave with passengers should be nabbed.

He has instructed the GRP officials to launch a drive at railway stations across the state.

The GRP officials at Kanpur Central are presently on a lookout for five eunuchs who have been involved in chain snatching, bag lifting and money extortion on trains.

The officials admitted that some eunuchs were arrested earlier but all were released for want of a solid proof.

"Eunuchs usually operate in groups of two or three. They board trains and demand money from passengers. Those who confront them have to face their wrath. Eunuchs strip themselves in public to embarrass the passengers. Thus people usually give money to avoid such problems," GRP inspector Paramhans Mishra said.

He further said that at times, eunuchs also steal bags of passengers.

Showing a copy of the circular which he has received from the ADG, Mishra said, "Instructions have come directly from the headquarters to take stern action against eunuchs who demand money from passengers. Presently we are conducting security drills at the station, which has alarmed them. It is difficult to find them at the station or in trains. But if they are found anywhere in and around the station, they will be arrested. They will not be allowed to travel without tickets."

Read more: GRP to crackdown on eunuchs' menace on trains - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kanpur/GRP-to-crackdown-on-eunuchs-menace-on-trains/articleshow/6312051.cms#ixzz0z0l1iiB3