http://scroll.in/article/809830/in-addition-to-condemning-the-orlando-massacre-why-not-work-to-decriminalise-377

LGBT RIGHTS

In addition to decrying the Orlando massacre, why not work to
decriminalise homosexuality in India?

The Islamic State and the American Right both encourage LGBTQ hatred.
India should not.

7 hours ago
Updated 6 hours ago

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

It is far too early for us to understand what motivated Omar Mateen to
allegedly walk into a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida with an
assault rifle and kill 50 people. Authorities claim Mateen called the
police before the attack and pledged allegiance to the Islamic State.
Mateen's father thinks he might know why his son picked that
particular nightclub: He told NBC News that Mateen had been enraged by
the sight of two men kissing each other months earlier, and said that
might be related to the massacre.

Even with those indicators, we don't know yet if it was indeed
homophobia that inspired the worst mass shooting in American history.
Yet, as Equality Florida pointed out in a statement, gay clubs –
starting with Stonewall Inn in New York – have long been integral to
the LGBTQ rights movement.

"Gay clubs hold a significant place in LGBTQ history. They were often
the only safe gathering place and this horrific attack strikes
directly at our sense of security."

Indeed, even if the motive hasn't been established, the attacks are
likely to have the effect of turning gay clubs into targets, and
leaving some in the LGBTQ community afraid to go to them. Even with
America's horrible record of mass shootings – there have been more
than 130 this year alone – the fact that the deadliest one in its
history took place at a gay club is hard to ignore.

If it is indeed homophobia that motivated the attack, as Mateen's
father has suggested, it has not emerged in a vacuum. The Islamic
State, to which Mateen allegedly pledged allegiance before carrying
out the attack, betrays horrific intolerance towards people from the
LGBTQ community in Muslim societies around the world.

But Mateen himself didn't grow up in a Muslim society. He was born in
New York and surely has been witness to the evolution of the LGBTQ
rights movement over the last few decades. Although great advances
have been made on this front, with the Barack Obama administration in
particular putting its weight behind legalising gay marriage, the
debate has also included the rancorous atmosphere that the American
religious Right has helped create.

Organisations like the Westboro Baptist Church, famous for holding
public protests proclaiming "God hates fags", were encouraged by
members of the Republican Party, who have sought to portray the LGBTQ
community as sinful deviants.

This is one of many matters on which right-wing Americans and Islamic
fundamentalists can actually make common cause, and the presumptive
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump continues in that long
tradition of encouraging hatred towards the gay community.

Meanwhile, over in India, the condemnations follow a much more
straightforward script without acknowledging the important LGBTQ
dimension to the attack.

Narendra Modi ✔ @narendramodi
Shocked at the shootout in Orlando, USA. My thoughts & prayers are
with the bereaved families and the injured.
11:32 PM - 12 Jun 2016
  3,362 3,362 Retweets   7,495 7,495 likes

Vasundhara Raje ✔ @VasundharaBJP
Shocked by the news of #OrlandoShooting incident. Precious lives lost
to cowardly act of terror.My prayers are with the families of victims.
1:23 AM - 13 Jun 2016
  107 107 Retweets   228 228 likes

ShivrajSingh Chouhan ✔ @ChouhanShivraj
News from Florida is distressing.Deeply pained at loss of so many
precious lives in senseless shooting on innocent people.This is
barbaric.
11:37 PM - 12 Jun 2016
  84 84 Retweets   191 191 likes

Rajeev Shukla ✔ @ShuklaRajiv
Saddened by the loss of so many lives in the Florida attack #Florida .
11:28 PM - 12 Jun 2016
  12 12 Retweets   15 15 likes

Milind Deora ✔ @milinddeora
We as a society have not learned to disagree without being violently
disagreeable ~ Martin Luther King, Jr.#Orlando#LGBT#Florida
10:46 PM - 12 Jun 2016
  37 37 Retweets   52 52 likes

Indian politicians and others in public life condemn the massacre with
the same global sentiments that come up after every mass shooting in
America, most commonly a sense of disbelief that one of the most
developed nations on Earth still has not figured out how to control
guns.

While condemnation and solidarity is important, there is an even more
empowering response to the horrific attacks that would represent a
truly appropriate reaction: Working to strike down Section 377 of the
Indian Penal Code.

The Orlando shooting has given people of the LGBTQ community a reason
to fear going to a gay club in case it were to be attacked. With
India, that fear is built-in, because gay sex is still illegal.
Section 377, a colonial law that criminalises "unnatural sex", remains
on the books in India. Although it is barely enforced, the very fact
of its existence gives people and authorities an easy excuse to harass
those from the LGBTQ community. What better way to say that India is
hostile to gay people than by saying their way of life is criminal?

Efforts have been made to get rid of 377. In 2009, a landmark judgment
saw the Delhi High Court striking down parts of the section, thereby
decriminalising consenting homosexual sex between two adults. Four
years later, however, the Supreme Court overturned this verdict,
saying that only Parliament can alter such a law, not the courts.

Just last year Congress Member of Parliament Shashi Tharoor was
prevented from even introducing a Bill attacking Section 377 in
Parliament. Politicians from across the spectrum have made noises
suggesting support for the LGBTQ community but the lack of numbers and
opposition to Tharoor's Bill made it clear that the political class
either doesn't consider the issue important enough or is afraid of the
fallout of striking down 377.

For all those who complain about toothless slacktivism and a cycle of
endless violence that results in condemnations and little else, the
Orlando attacks remind us of a far-too-real injustice that India
continues to perpetrate by keeping a bigoted law on its books. It may
not mean much for the families of those whose lives were lost in
Orlando, but every such attack is a reminder that India can do much
more to ensure the safety of those who have been turned into targets
far away.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to