Former Yugoslavia Lbian and Gay Rights News Service om EIN News
Contents:
- THE BALKANS – A PLACE WHERE BEG GAY IS NOT OKAY
- FORMER YUGOSLAVIA LBIAN AND GAY RIGHTS NEWS MONORG
- GAY RIGHTS RSIA AND THE FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS
- ACTIVISTS NMN VLENCE AGAST LGBTQ MUNY ST. VCENT, WHERE GAY SEX IS ILLEGAL
- HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH: ANTI-GAY LAWS PROMOTE VLENCE, DISCRIMATN ST. VCENT
THE BALKANS – A PLACE WHERE BEG GAY IS NOT OKAY
If you live the Balkans, and you say to your mother: 'Mum, you'll never have grandchildren. I'm gay“, then the support is the last thg you n expect. * gay rights in yugoslavia *
Abstract Natnalism has been one of the domtic nstrats to progrs on lbian, gay, bisexual, and transgenr (LGBT) rights, pecially the Balkans that are alg wh multiple postwar transn reali. Through the lens of genred natnalism, the societal secury dilemma, and polil homophobia, this article analyz how the polics and disurse of LGBT rights durg the past Bosnia reveal tensns between petg and multiple inti and narrativ—European, multiethnic, ethno-natnalist, and relig—g the vlent rponse to the 2008 Queer Sarajevo Ftival as a key illtratn. However, the past , LGBT rights have progrsed and antigay backlash to LGBT visibily ( addn to stronger external leverage and other factors) has rulted stronger activism and change.
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA LBIAN AND GAY RIGHTS NEWS MONORG
* gay rights in yugoslavia *
She ed to go to shoppg wh my boyiend, my brother is a kd of bodyguard whenever I arrange some gay-iendly parti. He was beaten by five men the middle of his hometown, he got beaten many different towns all over former Yugoslavia where he had attend gay-iendly events, he ed to be spat the streets, he ed to get threats too, but his worst experience were graffis all over his hometown wh his full name, wh a swastika - the emblem of the German Nazi Party, and wh rogatory term for gay populatns. "Another disturbg se was graffi right to my door 'ubij pera' /kill the gay/ when police said wasn't their jurisdictn and swched to munal police; munal police said wasn't their jurisdictn neher sce was the private property and so on.
Although the first gay pri the former Yugoslavia untri took place 2001 /Belgra Serbia and Ljubljana Slovenia/, Bosnia is still the one and only Balkan untry which still didn't manage to anise . As Dennis Altman wrote 1971: “prejudice agast homosexualy as ‘a bourgeois generacy’ beme strongly imbued Communist Parti throughout the world.
” Or as Conor O’Dwyer argued 2013: “munism left a profoundly stctive legacy this sphere, bequeathg a history of state reprsn of gays, lbians, and bisexuals […]. ” In my new book, Transnatnal Homosexuals Communist Poland: Cross-Borr Flows Gay and Lbian Magaz, I challenge such imagatns, potg out that one of the key problems behd them is lumpg munist untri together, as if they all adopted a uniform attu towards start, munist Europe had a plited geopolil stcture.
GAY RIGHTS RSIA AND THE FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS
A report om Human Rights Watch lls on the ernment of St. Vcent to overturn lonial-era anti-gay laws that have led to a recent wave of vlence and genr discrimatn on the small Caribbean island. * gay rights in yugoslavia *
Fally, munist Europe also clud two non-aligned stat: Yugoslavia, which spl up wh the Soviet Unn 1948, and Albania, which ped the Soviet Unn’s patronage Soviet Unn’s ‘antisodomy law’ – which punished same-sex acts between men by up to five years prison wh hard labour – is too often nsired as reprentg how all of munist Europe alt wh homosexualy. In fact, the Bolsheviks, who me to power durg the October Revolutn of 1917, had crimalized male homosexualy already 1922. Then, Joseph Stal recrimalized male homosexualy 1933-1934 wh the already mentned punishment of up to five years prison wh hard labour.
ACTIVISTS NMN VLENCE AGAST LGBTQ MUNY ST. VCENT, WHERE GAY SEX IS ILLEGAL
Fally, Rsia crimalized homosexualy 1993, after the fall of the Soviet Unn 1991, orr to jo the Council of Europe.
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH: ANTI-GAY LAWS PROMOTE VLENCE, DISCRIMATN ST. VCENT
Other former Soviet republics also crimalized homosexualy only after the breakthrough 1991 or have not yet done so: Ukrae 1991, Estonia and Latvia 1992, Lhuania 1993, Belas 1994, Moldova 1995, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan 1998, Azerbaijan and Geia 2000, Armenia 2003, while the mid-2017, male same-sex acts are still illegal Turkmenistan (up to two years of imprisonment) and Uzbekistan (up to three years of imprisonment), the Soviet Unn did not require uniformy this rpect om s satelle untri. It was also fluenced by the proment Polish soclogists of that time, Antoni Mikulski and Leon Wachholz, who promoted the terpretatn of homosexualy as nate. Intertgly, many Wtern untri – ually perceived as more progrsive than Central and Eastern European untri – were laggg behd Poland wh rpect to the legal stat of homosexualy.
Denmark, for example, crimalized same-sex acts 1933, Swen 1944, England 1967, Canada 1969, Wt Germany 1969, Atria 1971, Fland 1971, Norway 1972, Ireland 1993 and the Uned Stat, often nsired as the prototype of the Wt, fully crimalized homosexualy only 2003, more than seventy years after Poland did satelle untri of the Soviet Unn ually crimalized same-sex acts before the fall of munism Europe: Czechoslovakia and Hungary 1962, Bulgaria and East Germany 1968, the only exceptn beg Romania, which did so 1996. The suatn was even more plited Yugoslavia, which allowed s different republics to tablish their own laws regardg homosexualy.