WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A gay New York
man has filed a complaint against the Polish president for using images
of him and his partner in a national speech condemning gay marriage.
The image of Brendan Fay’s wedding with his partner Tom Moulton was
woven into President Lech Kaczynski’s televised address to the nation
Monday night. Fay said that Polish immigrants and reporters began
calling him on Tuesday, asking how he felt about having his image used
in the address. “My initial reaction was one of surprise and shock
really,” said Fay, a longtime gay activist who is a co-founder of the
All Inclusive St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Queens. The images —
including a marriage certificate identifying the couple — were shown as
the president warned against the dangers of adopting the European
Union’s new treaty and its Charter of Fundamental Rights, which
Kaczynski says could open the door to same-sex marriage in Poland. In
his letter to consul Krzysztof Kasprzyk, Fay wrote that the couple is
“frustrated to hear that images from such a joyous day are used to
spread intolerance.”
LONDON — Some in the international
human rights community are alarmed at developments in Egypt involving
gay men. Last week, five gay Egyptians were charged with “habitual
practice of debauchery,” a euphemism for gay sex, the New Scientist, a
British science and technology magazine, reported. The lead government
prosecutor told a lawyer for the defendants that the men, four of whom
are HIV-positive, shouldn’t be allowed to “roam the streets freely,”
the magazine said. The government there considers them a danger to the
public health. Joseph Amon of Human Rights Watch said linking
HIV-status and these “debauched activities,” undermines attempts to
contain HIV and will prevent others at risk from being tested, fearing
the consequences. Egypt has arrested 12 men under its debauchery laws
since October 2007, and four are now serving year-long jail terms. The
country’s Ministry of Health and Population declined to comment to the
magazine.
EDINBURGH, Scotland — Political
pressure is mounting on the British government to reverse its decision
to deport a gay Syrian teen from Scotland to his home country where he
faces almost certain imprisonment and torture, Scotland on Sunday, a
Scottish newspaper, reported this week. Scotland on Sunday revealed
last week that 19-year-old Jojo Jako Yakob was being held in Polmont
Young Offenders’ Institution awaiting deportation, despite evidence he
had been tortured almost to death in Syria, where homosexuality is
illegal. Shirley-Anne Somerville, a Nationalist Member of Scottish
Parliament, has lodged a parliamentary motion in support of our
campaign to let Yakob stay in the country. It received wide support,
the paper reported. Jojo fled his homeland two years ago after
surviving what activists called a harrowing ordeal at the hands of
Syrian police and prison guards, when he was arrested for distributing
anti-government leaflets. He was beaten and ended up in a coma,
Scotland on Sunday reported.
SALEM, Ore. — Israel has granted a
Palestinian a rare residency permit after the man, who is gay, said his
sexual orientation put his life in danger in the West Bank, a Defense
Ministry official said this week, according to a Reuters report. The
33-year-old Palestinian was issued a temporary permit to live with his
Israeli partner in Tel Aviv after arguing he faced death threats from
fellow Palestinians who disapproved of him being gay, Reuters said.
Israel’s Interior Ministry rarely issues permits for Palestinians in
the occupied West Bank who want to live with their partners in Israel,
regardless of sexual orientation, the report said.
LONDON — Police in London have
announced the arrest of a 37-year-old man suspected of hiring male sex
workers and not paying for them, Pink News, a British gay news agency,
reported. The man, arrested in Bangor, north Wales, has been linked to
17 offenses including counts of obtaining services by deception, two
allegations of theft, one of administering a substance with intent and
one allegation of rape. He is to return in May as police continue their
investigations, the report said. Last summer support workers at SW5, a
health clinic for sex workers, alerted police about a man who was
hiring male prostitutes and not paying for their services, Pink News
said.