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*Direct Link to UN 25-Page Report:*
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/19session/A.HRC.19.41_English.pdf
 UN Issues First Report on LGBT Human Rights 15 December 2011 – The first
ever United Nations report on the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender (LGBT) people details how around the world people are
killed or endure hate-motivated violence, torture, detention,
criminalization and discrimination in jobs, health care and education
because of their real or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity.

The 
report<http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/19session/A.HRC.19.41_English.pdf>,
released today by the UN Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights (
OHCHR <http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Pages/WelcomePage.aspx>) in Geneva, outlines
“a pattern of human rights violations… that demands a response,” and says
governments have too often overlooked violence and discrimination based on
sexual orientation and gender identity.

Homophobic and transphobic violence has been recorded in every region of
the world, the report finds, and ranges from murder, kidnappings, assaults
and rapes to psychological threats and arbitrary deprivations of liberty.

LGBT people are often targets of organized abuse from religious extremists,
paramilitary groups, neo-Nazis, extreme nationalists and others, as well as
family and community violence, with lesbians and transgender women at
particular risk.

“Violence against LGBT persons tends to be especially vicious compared to
other bias-motivated crimes,” the report notes, citing data indicating that
homophobic hate crimes often include “a high degree of cruelty and
brutality.”

Violent incidents or acts of discrimination frequently go unreported
because victims do not trust police, are afraid of reprisals or are
unwilling to identify themselves as LGBT.

The report – prepared in response to a request from the UN Human Rights
Council earlier this year – draws from information included in past UN
reporting, official statistics on hate crimes where there are available,
and reporting by regional organizations and some non-governmental
organizations (NGOs).

In the report, Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,
calls on countries to repeal laws that criminalize homosexuality, abolish
the death penalty for offences involving consensual sexual relations,
harmonize the age of consent for heterosexual and homosexual conduct, and
enact comprehensive anti-discrimination laws.

In 76 countries it remains illegal to engage in same-sex conduct and in at
least five countries – Iran, Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Yemen –
the death penalty prevails.

Ms. Pillay recommends that Member States also promptly investigate all
killings or serious violent incidents perpetrated because of actual or
perceived sexual orientation or gender identity, and to establish systems
to record such incidents.

The High Commissioner also calls on countries to ensure that no one fleeing
persecution because of their sexual orientation or gender identity is
returned to a territory where their life or freedom is at threat, and that
asylum laws recognize that sexual orientation or gender identity is a valid
basis for claiming persecution.

Public information campaigns should be introduced, especially in schools,
to counter homophobia, and police and law enforcement officials should also
receive training to ensure LGBT people are treated appropriately and
fairly.

Charles Radcliffe, the chief of OHCHR’s global issues section, told UN
Radio that “one of the things we found is if the law essentially reflects
homophobic sentiment, then it legitimizes homophobia in society at large.
If the State treats people as second class or second rate or, worse, as
criminals, then it’s inviting people to do the same thing.”

He stressed that all UN Member States have an obligation under
international human rights law to decriminalize homosexuality, adding it
was important to persuade rather than lecture States to change their laws.

“I think we have seen the balance of opinion amongst States really shifting
significantly in recent years. Some 30 countries have decriminalized
homosexuality in the last two decades or so.”

Mr. Radcliffe said that while all people have freedom of religion, “no
religious belief or prevailing cultural values can justify stripping people
of their basic rights.”

The report, which will be discussed by Council members at a meeting in
March next year, has been released as top UN officials have increasingly
raised concerns about human rights violations against LGBT people.

Last year, in a speech marking Human Rights Day,
Secretary-General<http://www.un.org/sg/>Ban Ki-moon said that “as men
and women of conscience, we reject
discrimination in general, and in particular discrimination based on sexual
orientation or gender identity.”

Ms. Pillay, during a public conversation last week on social media, also
called for an end to bullying and other forms of persecution of LGBT
people.

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