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Archive for September, 2006

SDLP YOUTH @ QUEENS: FRESHERS FAIR RECRUITMENT A HUGE SUCCESS

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

“SDLP Youth today received a huge amount of interest at Queen’s University Freshers Fair. We recruited more people, give out more youth literature and expanded our mailing list more than in any previous year.

SDLP Youth @ Queens Chair Gavin Boyd continued, “The fair seems to be bigger and better than previous years; our stall has been buzzing all day long. We have had more youth members at our stall distributing new SDLP Youth booklets, answering questions and recruiting new members.

“SDLP Youth are also helping students to register to vote. We aim to show students that politics affects their everyday life; issues such as student fees to minimum wages should give them enough reason to be politically active. No vote, no voice.”

SDLP YOUTH ANTI-CENSORSHIP CAMPAIGN AT MAGEE

Tuesday, September 26th, 2006

SDLP Youth continued to pressure the University of Ulster’s ban on political activity. At this years freshers fairs, UU ordered political parties to refrain from displaying flags, colours or emblems, political leaflets, banners, backdrops or manifestos and also asked that no elected representatives attend.

Universities & Colleges Officer Peter Armstrong said: “SDLP Youth are at Magee today to protest against the Political Protocol. While the protocol has existed for 5 years, the UU Students’ Union is only now choosing to interpret the Political Protocol as a basis for banning all political parties from participating in freshers events.

“SDLP Youth were not allowed into the Sports Hall and were forced to stay outside. In protest, we placed our normal posters across the university campus with CENSORED written across them, which is essentially what the UUSU is doing to both the parties and their students who want to be politically informed.

“SDLP Youth believe many students at Magee are very interested in what political parties have to say. We are here to listen to the students and answer any questions. Students are telling us they are opposed to student politics being censored by the UU.”

SDLP Youth Chairman John O’Doherty said: “The Electoral Commission and NILGA are spending a lot of money trying to get young people involved in politics, yet UU is actively campaigning to keep politics out of their University. It is pointless political parties attending these events if they cannot be political.”

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Full pictures in our Photo Gallery

UU Ban on Political Parties

SDLP YOUTH ALARMED AT IRAQI ‘SEXUAL CLEANSING’

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006

SDLP Youth said they are deeply alarmed at reports of “sexual cleansing” in Iraq, where gays and lesbians are being routinely killed by militias.

Chairman and SDLP youth LGBT (Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender) spokesperson John O’Doherty said: “I found this information absolutely terrifying. I cannot believe that this is happening and even more so I cannot believe it has not received more media coverage. A number of gay Iraqi citizens have been targeted by death squads in an escalating campaign of “sexual cleansing” in Iraq This has led to the executions of many gays and lesbians. Some have managed to flee, but those left behind hide from public view.

“People are living in daily fear of their lives because of the way they were born, yet this information is not being relayed to the western world. It is time that democratic governments from across the world took this issue and other issues from within Iraq seriously.

“Condemnation is simply not enough any more. Innocent Iraqis are losing their lives day and daily for something as simple as having nice clothes and a nice haircut.

“I would call on LGBT groups, government and international rights groups such as Amnesty International to come together to target this issue and to look at ways of supporting gays living within Iraq. These murders cannot continue and we cannot let it continue. We must work together spilling our sweat to stop the spilling of Iraqi blood.

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Below is information and testaments taken from Iraqi people (source advocate.com)

“Every gay and lesbian here lives in fear, just pure fear, of being beaten or killed,” says Ahmad, a 34-year-old gay man, via telephone from his home in Baghdad. “Homosexuality is seen here as imported from the West and as the work of the devil.”

Ahmad is masculine and “straight-acting,” he says. “I can go out without being harassed or followed.” But that’s not the case for his more effeminate gay friends. “They just cannot go outside, period,” he says. “If they did, they would be killed.”

To help them survive, Ahmad has been bringing food and other necessities to their homes. “The situation for us gay people here is beyond bad and dangerous,” he says.

Life for gay and lesbian citizens in war-torn Iraq has become grave and is getting worse every day. While President Bush hails a new, “democratic” society, thousands of civilians are dying in a low-level civil war–and gays are being targeted just for being gay. The Badr Corps–the military arm of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI for short), the country’s most powerful Shiite political group–has launched a campaign of “sexual cleansing,” marshaling death squads to exterminate homosexuality.

When Iraq’s chief Shiite cleric, the Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, removed a fatwa calling for death to gay men from his Web site earlier this year–it wasn’t removed for lesbians–some observers thought the antigay reign of terror might end. But the fatwa still remains in effect; indeed, persecution of gay Iraqis has only escalated.

“In the last two months the situation has gotten worse and worse,” says Ali Hili, a gay Iraqi living in London, who founded and coordinates the group Iraqi LGBT. “Just last month there were three raids by the Interior Ministry on two of the safe houses we maintain in Basra and Najaf. They were looking for specific names and people, and some of them were killed on the spot.”

Hili’s group, some 30 gay Iraqi exiles who came together last fall in London in the wake of Sistani’s death-to-gays fatwa, has a network of informants and supporters throughout Iraq. With anguish in his voice, he recalls two of them, lesbians who ran a safe house in Najaf that harbored young kids who’d been trapped in the commercial sex trade. “They were accused of running a brothel,” he says. “They were slain in the safe house with their throats cut. This was only weeks ago.

“Every day we hear from our network inside Iraq of new horrors happening to our gay and lesbian people–it’s overwhelming, we just can’t cope,”

Hili continues. “Look, we’re only a little volunteer organization, and nobody helps us–not the American occupier, not the U.N., not Amnesty International, nobody. We’re desperate for help.”

Through a translator, several gay Iraqis spoke to The Advocate about the dire circumstances for gay people in their country. None wanted their last names printed for fear of reprisals, and all had horrific stories to tell.

Hussein, 32, is a gay man living with his married brother’s family in Baghdad. “I’ve been living in a state of fear for the last year since Ayatollah Sistani issued that fatwa, in which he even encouraged families to kill their sons and brothers if they do not change their gay behavior,” he says. “My brother, who has been under pressure and threats from Sistani’s followers about me, has threatened to harm me himself, or even kill me, if I show any signs of gayness.”

Hussein already lost his job in a photo lab because the shop owner did not want people to think that he was supporting a gay man. “Now I’m very self-conscious about my look and the way I dress–I try to play it safe,” says Hussein, who is slightly effeminate. “Several times I was followed in the street and beaten just because I had a nice, cool haircut that looked feminine to them. Now I just shave my head.”

Indeed, even the way one dresses is enough to get a gay Iraqi killed. “Just the fact of looking neat and clean, let alone looking elegant and well-groomed, is very dangerous for a gay person,” Hussein says. “So now I don’t wear nice clothes, so that no one would even suspect that I’m gay. I now only leave home if I want to get food.”

One of Hussein’s best friends, Haydar, was recently found shot in the back of the head at a deserted ranch outside the city. “Some say he was shot by a family member in an act of honor killing; some say he was shot by those so-called death squads,” Hussein says. “Everyone says it’s easy these days to get away with killing gays, since there is no law and order here.” All Hussein thinks about is getting out of Iraq. “Things were bad under Saddam for gays,” he says, “but not as bad as now. Then, no one feared for their lives. Now, you can be gotten rid of at any time.”

But even fleeing from Iraq to a democratic Western nation is no guarantee of safety. The case of Ibaa Al-alawi, a well-educated 28-year-old gay Iraqi who fled from Baghdad to London last fall and is facing deportation, is sadly typical. “I am a victim of this religious, homophobic ideology imported from Iran by SCIRI and the Badr Corps,” says Al-alawi, who was born in to a secular family and speaks perfect English, via telephone from London. “The Badr Corps is very well-organized–they control two floors of the Iraqi Interior Ministry [in London] and they wear police uniforms.”

Al-alawi worked for two years for the British embassy in Baghdad, running a technical scholarship program for students who wanted to study in the United Kingdom. “But my family began getting threats about me from the Badr Corps,” he says. “They threatened my brother, telling him, ‘If you can’t get your brother to change and stop his gay ways, we’ll kill him.’ They threw a stone, with a threatening letter fastened around it, into the garden of our house–it quoted passages from the Koran, and then it said, in very illiterate terms, ‘Your son is sinful, and if he doesn’t change from being gay, in three days he will be dead.’ “The incident frightened Al-alawi so much that he quit his job at the embassy and holed up at his Baghdad home for two months. “One day I ventured out to shop with my mother, and while we were out a pickup truck came to our house, carrying hooded men in uniforms who smashed down our front door and threw a hand grenade into our home,” he recalls. “If my mother and I had been there, we would have been killed. The neighbors who witnessed this attack told us it was the Badr Corps.”

The next day he bought a plane ticket for London, where he applied for asylum on arrival. But his request was refused by the Home Office, which handles immigration in the United Kingdom. “They told me, ‘We believe that you face discrimination in Iraq, but we don’t believe you are persecuted.’ I even showed them a photo of me next to Tony Blair from when I worked at their embassy, but it didn’t help.”

In the first week of August, Al-alawi’s administrative appeal against the Home Office’s deportation order was denied. At press time he was in court, seeking to stop the Blair government from sending him back to Iraq. “My life is in serious danger if I’m sent back to Iraq,” he says. “You know, I have a master’s degree in English literature–to think that a cheap bullet from the Badr Corps could end it all–what a waste of an education.”

Mohammed, a gay Iraqi in his 20s from Basra, fled to Jordan on July 17 after the Badr Corps assassinated his partner. “I don’t know how they found out about my partner, but they killed him by a bullet to the back of his head, so I knew that the danger was so close to me,” he says via e-mail. “I don’t know how I can live without this relationship.”

The death of his partner marked the culmination of years of persecution for Mohammed, starting with his own family. “I’ve been gay since childhood,” he says, but “my family are Shia and don’t permit this [homosexuality]. I think they would kill us before the Badr Corps could if they knew about us.”

The Badr Corps’ murderous campaign is not limited to street executions–it includes Internet entrapment and intimidation backed by violence. Networks of neighborhood informers–SCIRI militants and sympathizers–track suspected gays and report them for targeting by the terror campaign. “One day on the Internet I entered a site for gays in Iraq, and specifically in Basra,” Mohammed recalls. “While on this site

I met a new guy who gave me his name and e-mail. But God’s mercy saves me from him–I saw abnormal movement in that site where I met this guy and got out of it rapidly. Later I discovered that he worked secretly with the Badr militia to find and kill gays.”

After discovering them online, SCIRI supporters will sometimes instigate beatings of suspected gays in the street, says Ahmad. People from the neighborhoods and even passersby will join in. “If you are gay, you can’t trust anyone you meet unless they are old friends from within your circle of acquaintances,” Ahmad says. “You can’t date or meet new people because you wouldn’t know what their motives are.”

Every new encounter is fraught with danger. “There have been cases where some gay guys meet some men they thought were gay too, but it turned out they just wanted to use them sexually and then blackmail them for money by threatening to inform on them” to the Badr Corps, Ahmad says. Or a new friend could turn out to be an undercover agent. “We are desperate to end this state of fear and horror in which we have been living,” Ahmad says. “Many of us want to leave.”

SDLP YOUTH PROTEST UNIVERSITY POLITICS BAN (includes radio interview)

Friday, September 8th, 2006

SDLP Youth have today condemned the University of Ulster’s ban on political activity at the freshers’ fairs. UU has ordered political parties to refrain from displaying flags, colours or emblems, political leaflets, banners, backdrops or manifestos and also asked that no elected representatives attend.

SDLP Youth Chairman John O’Doherty said: “The Electoral Commission and NILGA are spending a lot of money trying to get young people involved in politics, yet UU is actively campaigning to keep politics out of their University. It is pointless political parties attending these events if they cannot be political.

“I can understand the universities wanting to keep a sectarian-neutral environment, but to even talk of a political-neutral environment makes no sense at all. They have student elections in the university and student council, so this cannot make for a politically neutral environment.

“It also amazes me the stance that NUS/USI has taken on this issue. When contacted by myself they stated that they support the University. Yet the NUS/USI mission statement says:

‘NUS-USI will constantly improve the lives and experiences of students in the North of Ireland by ensuring their voice is heard and effectively represented; by developing democratic and strong students’ unions; and by providing collective benefits and access to information for all students’.

“The anti-politics campaign is in total disregard of this. Students should be given the right to make an informed decision of whether or not to join a political party. I have attended freshers’ events for four
years now and never have I heard of anyone being offended by political parties or their stalls.

“I urge UU to retract their statement and allow political parties to attend all freshers’ events and to allow them to inform their students of the benefits involved in democracy. Otherwise SDLP youth will not be taking part in any of the freshers within the university and instead will be setting up outside the university grounds and protesting against this injustice and political discrimination. I would urge all political parties to do the same.”

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Radio interview : BBC Radio Ulster - Evening Extra Interview- John O’Doherty

Below is an extract from the letter sent out by UU

September 2006

You may be aware that the University of Ulster Students’ Union (Sports Union) and the University have an agreed Protocol governing the political activity of all Students’ Union Societies.

Our protocol states :

“The political situation in Northern Ireland requires that the University and the Students’ Union be aware of the diversity of views and political sensibilities amongst students and staff and the wider
community. Towards this end, the University has adopted a policy of creating a politically neutral environment throughout all parts of the Institution … ”

In order to meet our obligations under the protocol, we would also request that you refrain from inviting Party Political figures from your organisation to this event.

In addition, by requesting a stall at the Fayres there are other regulations which must be adhered to and these include:

No flags, colours or emblems; nor political leaflets, banners, backdrops or manifestos may be displayed.

SDLP YOUTH WELCOMES SCHOOL BUS BELTS

Tuesday, September 5th, 2006

SDLP Youth have today welcomed the announcement by Children’s Minister Marie Eagle that 100 new school buses are to be commissioned which will have seat belts fitted.

SDLP Youth Schools Representative Peter Armstrong said: “The decision by the Children’s Minister is to be welcomed. It is a first step in the battle for safer school transport.

“The SDLP and SDLP Youth have long called for a seat belt to be fitted for every child on every school bus. SDLP Youth campaigned for legislation to be introduced that would provide funding for safety on all public transport, and remove the current exemption that allows school buses not to have seat belts.
“SDLP Youth also campaigned for the ‘three for two’ rule to be abandoned, which puts three children into seats designed for two.

“The current situation faced by our school children is unacceptable as inquiry after inquiry and report after report has indicated.

“A report by the University of Ulster in June this year showed what we already knew - not wearing a seat belt is deadly. The report asked children what they thought and overwhelmingly they said that they do not feel safe travelling to and from school. There is no better evidence than children’s fear for their safety“.


BBC News article