Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Despite Turkey's Reforms, Gay Community Says It Lacks Legal Protecti

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Despite Turkey's Reforms, Gay Community Says It Lacks Legal Protecti

    DESPITE TURKEY'S REFORMS, GAY COMMUNITY SAYS IT LACKS LEGAL PROTECTIONS

    The Associated Press
    International Herald tribune, France
    May 2 2007

    ANKARA, Turkey: In the 1980s and 1990s, Turkish police routinely raided
    gay bars, detained transvestites, and banned homosexual conferences
    and festivals.

    Next month, in a sign of how the state has loosened up, gay activists
    will hold forums on several university campuses to discuss their
    rights and the discrimination they still face.

    Gays in Turkey say they lack legal protections and face social stigma
    in a Muslim nation with a secular tradition of government that has
    implemented broad reforms in its bid to join the European Union - but
    remains heavily influenced by conservative and religious values. For
    the most part, they face less pressure than in Egypt, Saudi Arabia
    and other Muslim countries where Islamic codes are enforced with
    more rigor.

    However, Turkey's homosexuals are jostling for more rights in a
    crowded field.

    The historical feud between Turks and Armenians, as well as the
    concerns of ethnic Kurds and minority Christians, attract more
    international attention and pressure for change on the Turkish
    government.

    "There are so many problems in Turkey," Ali Erol, a member of the gay
    rights group Kaos GL, said in an interview in his office in Ankara,
    the Turkish capital. "It looks as though gay rights are put down
    below in the list of things to be taken care of."

    In March, the chief editor of the group's magazine, also named
    Kaos GL, was acquitted of charges that he had illegally published
    pornography in a July 2006 issue after a judge noted that copies
    were seized before they were put on sale. The editor, Umut Guner,
    could have faced several years in jail if convicted.

    The issue that got the magazine in trouble showed two images of men
    in explicit sexual poses, beside an article that editors described
    as an analysis of issues relating to pornography. The magazine first
    published in 1994, and became legal when it secured a license five
    years later. It comes out every two months, and has a circulation of
    up to 1,000.

    In recent years, Turkey reworked its penal code to bring it into
    line with European standards. The new version does not specifically
    ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, although the
    issue was discussed at the draft stage.

    Justice Ministry officials had said that laws barring discrimination
    on the basis of gender, race, ethnicity, religion and political views
    were enough to protect its citizens.

    "There are some 'hate crime' articles in the criminal code, but they
    are not used appropriately," said Levent Korkut, head of Amnesty
    International's operations in Turkey. "Impunity is a problem in
    this area."

    He noted that even some Turks who describe themselves as liberals say:
    '"We don't want to protect these people.'"

    Gay sex is not a crime in Turkey, and some clubs and cinemas in big
    cities openly cater to homosexuals. Gay and lesbian societies exist
    at several universities. But the vast majority of homosexuals remain
    discreet in a country where liberal views have yet to make inroads in
    rural areas and many urban settings. Municipalities have some leeway
    to introduce laws safeguarding "morality," which gay activists view
    as a potential threat to their freedom.

    Some gays, notably poet Murathan Mungan and the late singer Zeki
    Muren, achieved celebrity status and openly acknowledged their sexual
    orientation. Similarly, historians and novelists have referred to
    a degree of tolerance for gay sex among some sectors of the elite
    during the Ottoman Empire centuries ago.

    Yet, for many, being homosexual is an exercise in deception. One gay
    man, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he was distraught
    years ago because high school classmates kept calling him "ibne,"
    a derogatory word for gay in Turkish.

    The man, now a university student, said he avoids physical contact
    with his boyfriend when they are in public, and passes him off as a
    close friend. He said he is often mocked if he wears an article of
    clothing that people think is feminine.

    Unable to find regular jobs, many transvestites and transsexuals
    work as prostitutes, an often dangerous profession that has led to
    the murders of some at the hands of clients.

    Some deadly "hate crimes" were never publicized because police
    did not reveal the sexual orientation of the victims, according to
    gay activists. In some cases, they said, gays who were harassed or
    physically harmed because of their orientation did not report the
    incident or go to court because they wanted to avoid scrutiny.

    The European Union has funded gay groups in Turkey, which sometimes
    coordinate with the Turkish Ministry of Health and other government
    agencies. Kaos GL has links to Lambda Istanbul, a gay group in
    Turkey's biggest city, and will host an "international anti-homophobia"
    meeting on university campuses in Ankara next month.

    "We want to share and learn the experiences of all gays and lesbians
    who struggle against homophobia in the Middle East, Balkans, Europe
    and the other parts of the world," the group said in a statement. It
    has invited international speakers, including journalists and European
    lawmakers who will discuss gay issues in their own countries.

    The Kaos GL magazine paid tribute to Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian
    journalist who was allegedly slain by extremist nationalists in
    January, by printing a somber image of him on the back cover of a
    recent issue.

    "Those people who murdered Hrant Dink do not like us either,"
    Erol said.
Working...
X