TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
The LGBTQ Blog


REV. DR. BRENT HAWKES AWARDED THE YMCA 2006 Peace Medallion Award.
Related to country: Canada

Translations available in: English (original) | French

The YMCA Peace Medallion Award recognizes individuals who have shown a commitment to peace through personal contributions made within their community. Peace Medallions are awarded in communities across the GTA during YMCA World Peace Week: November 18-25, 2006.

We honour individuals who are peacemakers, working in a volunteer capacity towards peaceful solutions to violence, conflict, discrimination and injustice; who have had a significant impact on the lives of others in their community, but without any special recognition or special resources.

Past recipients come from all walks of life yet they are united in their active commitment to creating a culture of peace.

You are invited to the
YMCA 2006 Peace Medallion
Awards Presentation
Honouring Peacemakers in our Community

Thursday, November 23, 7:30 a.m.
YMCA Charles Street Auditorium
42 Charles St. E. (Yonge and Bloor), Toronto. Canada

RSVP: Veronica Hercules (416) 413-1020 ext 4204
please be sure to indicate ceremony location when responding.

October 27, 2006 | 7:50 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


When the blindfold came off. WORLD POLITICS / Activist calls Mexico dollar-friendly, not gay-friendly
Related to country: Mexico


Written by Aidan Johnson / Xtra / Thursday, October 12, 2006

How lesbian poet and Mexican human rights activist Emma Beltran came to be in Canada is not a happy story.

Beltran says she was kidnapped at gunpoint by four men on a busy street in Mexico City on the night of Mar 23, 2001 and for seven days was subjected to a waking nightmare of physical and psychological torture at the hands of the Mexican National Army, and thus the Mexican government.

"I was blindfolded the whole time, but I knew that the place was in the countryside," says Beltran, who came to Canada in 2002 and was granted refugee status in 2005. "It was quiet, and the air was fresh. Not like the city at all. I heard crickets when they moved me from the van to the building."

At the time, Beltran, 32, was a writer-activist deeply involved in the national student and indigenous-rights movements in Mexico. She says that her kidnappers made it plain that her politics, including her open lesbianism, were the reasons for the torture.

Her new life in Toronto has her continuing her literary career and working for the rights of queer refugees to Canada, including writing a resource guide and practical advice book aimed at queer refugee status claimants.

"Gay and trans refugees face incredible barriers when they claim sexual orientation as the basis for their refugee status," says Beltran. "They're often just not believed. Or the immigration court insists that homophobia or transphobia in the home country can't be that bad, because the country has some sort of official policy saying [gaybashing is] illegal. But the judge doesn't know anything about the lives of gay people or trans people in that country, of course."

Beltran speaks of a queer reality in Mexico that belies the reputation the country has among many gay tourists who visit the country's apparently queer-friendly resorts.

"The resorts aren't gay-friendly, they're dollar-friendly," Beltran says. "The people who run the resorts are all smiles for gay tourists with money to spend there. But they'd spit on the poor gay Mexican who lives near the resort, because he's gay."

Beltran knows of Mexican trans people punched in the face on subways for being trans. The antiqueer aspect of her own persecution was more extreme.

"During the seven days of my torture, I was repeatedly gang-raped. The men said that they knew I was a lesbian, that this would make me not a lesbian," she says. "The blindfold only ever came off when they took photographs of me with a blinding flash, so I couldn't see anything. But I know I would recognize those men today, by their voices."

Beltran says that her own refugee status is based on her persecution as a political activist, rather than her persecution as a lesbian specifically.

She says that her persecution was triggered by work she had done as a journalist and broadcaster with the radical student radio station at the National Autonomous University Of Mexico in Mexico City, offering news and commentary on the national student strike that shaped the Mexican political scene in 1999 and 2000.

Beltran had earned a reputation for political radicalism as a writer and activist working in Chiapas, the southern Mexican state best known as the home base of the Zapatista Army Of National Liberation, the social justice movement for and by the marginalized of Mexico, particularly indigenous people.

From 1994 to 2000, she split her time between Mexico City and Chiapas coordinating political poetry-writing groups, journalism and theater workshops, and Spanish literature classes for indigenous activists.

"The indigenous people and the Zapatistan movement are queer-positive," she says.

Today, Beltran is a member of the Writers In Exile Network Of PEN Canada, the organization for writers imprisoned and exiled by government regimes, and for freedom of expression. The Canadian PEN chapter is presently chair of the international network, and arranged for Beltran to work at the University Of Windsor in spring 2006 as exiled writer-in-residence.

Beltran's English- and Spanish-language poetry has been published in the US, Canada, Mexico and Russia. While much of her work is on explicitly political themes, Beltran also writes flowing and lyric verse that suggests Romantic poetry of nature and love. Her poetry suggests that Beltran has a power to see beyond her immediate, pressing circumstances as one political refugee.

She hopes to eventually find a way to pursue her case back in Mexico through legal channels, and find justice.

"I'm not interested in justice for me, not at all," she says. "I'm interested in justice for all of the victims of torture and political imprisonment in Mexico. If I could somehow use my case so that the UN condemns Mexico for its crimes, so that justice comes for the activists who have suffered there, that would be the ideal. That's what I want."

Beltran's guide for queer refugee claimants is available at the 519 Community Centre (519 Church St). http://www.the519.org/

Written by Aidan Johnson / Xtra / Thursday, October 12, 2006
http://www.xtra.ca/public/viewstory.aspx?AFF_TYPE=3&STORY_ID=2194&PUB_TEMPLATE_ID=2

October 17, 2006 | 7:07 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Gay refugees find safe place
Related to country: Canada


The 519 organization offers peer support and acceptance
Many from countries where it's dangerous to `come out' Oct. 6, 2006.THULASI SRIKANTHAN Toronto Star, STAFF REPORTER
The 519
For years, Ugandan-born Shafiq Mawji kept his sexual orientation to himself, terrified of the consequences.

Today, Mawji — who came out of the closet two years ago — is helping other refugees at The 519, a Toronto organization that is open to everyone but focuses on programming for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered communities.

"It's the Mecca for gay refugees from outside of Canada," said Mawji, who joined shortly after arriving here in March 2004. He insisted on using a pseudonym, for fear of affecting his ongoing refugee case.

Refugees from all over the world — including Eastern Europe, Africa and South and Central America — come out for the "refugee peer support group," one of the key programs The 519 offers.

The 519 is supported by the United Way of Greater Toronto and located on Church St. in the heart of Toronto's gay community. It offers a variety of programs that include a legal advice clinic, anti-violence programs, income-tax clinics, gay parenting programs and community counselling.

"We noticed many people coming to 519 to make contact with the (gay community) once they arrived from countries where it is not safe to identify themselves," said Alison Kemper, executive director.

"I think coming out for some people is way too dangerous because in some countries, there is the death penalty. Once inside the group, they are willing to identify themselves."

For many refugees, coming to a welcoming space is a transforming experience, she said.
"For many, it's an overwhelming experience to be in a gay- and lesbian-positive environment," Kemper said. "It's something that doesn't exist in many places around the world.

"For many, it's their first experience with a place that is safe, secure and accepting."
Many refugees come to the group facing several challenges, said Geoff MacDonald, volunteer co-ordinator of the refugee peer support group.

"There is certainly racism, they are alienated, and there is difficulty navigating the system," MacDonald said, referring to the struggles of many to find status in Canada.

"A lot of people are also nervous. They are not sure what we do."
But it hasn't stopped people from coming, he said. The program has been popular, drawing about 100 people in the past two years. And for those like Mawji, it's a place he can't imagine doing without. "I came from a troubled childhood. I never had support," he said.

"This was like coming to a new family. It's a refuge." Mawji, who has lived in Pakistan and the United States, says the support group has helped him in his attempts to get refugee status in Canada, and to deal with the emotional fallout from his family shunning him and having his credentials not recognized in his new country.

"I was a basket case," he said. Now, he says, he's feeling a bit better because "they help you find your way through the maze."

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the United Way of Greater Toronto.

The target for the 2006 fundraising campaign is $100 million to support 200 health and social services agencies serving more than one million people in Toronto.

To donate, go to http://www.unitedwaytoronto.com or call 416-777-2001.519 artic

October 16, 2006 | 12:38 PM Comments  0 comments



Amnesty: Situations Worsens For Gays In Uganda
Related to country: Uganda


(New York City) Amnesty International says the situation in Uganda is increasingly worsening for the country's LGBT population - particularly in the past week.

In at least three cases, Amnesty says, people named as gay by a Ugandan magazine, the Red Pepper, suffered harassment and were ostracized by colleagues and families.

The human rights group says that is concerned that those outed by the publication risk arrest on the basis of their alleged sexual orientation and could face humiliating and degrading treatment in custody.

Gay sex is illegal in Uganda - punishable by prison terms. Those convicted report prolonged beatings and other abuses while incarcerated.

Last year the government made it a criminal offense for a same-sex couple to marry, anyone performing a gay marriage could be imprisoned, and foreign nationals would not be exempt from the law even if they were in country without their spouse, including international aid workers.

The government also promotes abstinence rather than condoms in the prevention of HIV/AIDS. Condoms are reportedly in short supply in stores with AIDS activists suggesting it is part of a government plan.

Amnesty in a statement Tuesday called on the government to respect the human rights provisions of its own constitution and to abide by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

The UN Human Rights Committee, which monitors states’ implementation of the ICCPR, has urged states not only to repeal laws criminalizing homosexuality but also to enshrine the prohibition of discrimination based on sexual orientation into their constitutions or other fundamental laws.

The Ugandan government has not responded to Amnesty's call.

THIS ARTICLE WRITTEN by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff August 29, 2006 - 9:00 pm ET
Link to Article http://365gay.com/Newscon06/08/082906uganda.htm

September 26, 2006 | 12:37 PM Comments  1 comments



HIV patients in search of a home
Related to country: Canada


About 160 AIDS-conference delegates await chance to make refugee claims
MARINA JIMÉNEZ IMMIGRATION REPORTER The Globe and Mail Sat Sept 9th, 2006

It was hardly a surprise when 160 HIV-positive foreigners in Toronto for the recent AIDS conference decided to make refugee claims.

The non-governmental organizations that lobbied for their visas were so worried they would defect, many dispatched minders to ensure the delegates showed up for their return flights.

Joaquin Ramirez, a 36-year-old clothing seller from El Salvador, was one conference delegate who gave his minder the slip.

"To be gay isn't against the law in El Salvador," said Mr. Ramirez, a soft-spoken, slim, gay man, in the first interview he has given about his claim. "But you are beaten and raped for it. Growing up I was raped by two [male] relatives and I never told anyone about it. It was a terrible experience. One burned me with a cigarette on my back."
The country where Mr. Ramirez recently became infected with the human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS has a vicious culture of homophobia and the second-highest homicide rate in the Americas.

He was also raped by three police officers who, he said, refused to use his proffered condom even when he disclosed his HIV status. When they later contracted HIV, one of the officers threatened to hunt him down and kill him.

Mr. Ramirez, who is receiving medical care and antiretroviral drugs while he awaits a hearing date, is amazed at the acceptance of homosexuality in Canada, where gay couples can marry.

His case, and those of the South Africans, Ugandans, Eritreans, Peruvians and others who made refugee claims after arriving here for last month's AIDS conference, have put the issue of HIV-positive refugee claimants in the spotlight.

Canada assesses the health needs of prospective immigrants who are living with HIV and rejects those who would place an excessive burden on the health-care system. No refugee claimant is disqualified from making a claim in Canada just because of their HIV-positive status.

And there is no automatic right to asylum for people with HIV who cannot access antiretroviral drugs in their own country.

"Simply being sick and from a country too poor to provide you with drugs isn't enough to qualify under the refugee definition," says Audrey Macklin, a University of Toronto law professor and former member of the Immigration and Refugee Board.

Claimants must establish they were persecuted and that, if deported to their country of origin, they would suffer "cruel and unusual treatment." The inability of the country to provide adequate medical care doesn't count.

As Mr. Ramirez's case illustrates, however, many HIV-positive refugee claimants have multiple reasons for seeking protection. He has access to antiretroviral drugs, like about 60 per cent of the reported 36,000 Salvadorans with HIV or AIDS. (The real number of infected is likely higher due to underreporting.)

Instead, his claim is based on the persecution he said he has suffered at the hands of security officials who regularly beat and rape homosexuals and transvestites in the country of 6.7 million.

Although Salvadoran law prohibits discrimination on the basis of HIV status and sexual orientation, a 2005 U.S. Department of State country report found that in practice it is widespread. Protection of human rights is undermined by "widespread impunity, corruption among the security forces . . . and gang violence."

One night last year, three off-duty police officers followed Mr. Ramirez out of a café in Aguilares, a town 45 minutes outside of San Salvador. They took him to a sugar plantation and raped him, he said. "I said 'I'm HIV-positive, don't do this,' and they accused me of lying," he said. "They raped me and left me there, stealing my address book. Obviously, I was too frightened to go to the police."

A few months later, one of the officers called his sister and threatened to kill him because he had infected the policemen with HIV. Terrified, Mr. Ramirez took refuge in the YMCA, he said.

As a volunteer with an organization helping people living with HIV, he applied for a visa to attend the AIDS conference in Toronto last year. His request was rejected. He reapplied, this time supported by Fundasida El Salvador, a non-governmental organization.

A delegate with Fundasida came to Toronto with him, and kept tabs on Mr. Ramirez. "When I didn't turn up at the conference one day, he cancelled my hotel and took my luggage and put it in his room. Later, he threatened me that I had to return to El Salvador," he said.

Since defecting, officials have contacted his sister, warning that his decision reflects poorly on Fundasida. "But I am too scared to go back. The police are still out there and could track me down," he said.

Another refugee claimant is Amanuel Tesfamichael, founder of Eritrea's 60,000-member association for people living with AIDS.

He was allowed to travel to the AIDS conference only on the condition he surrender his passport to two government minders (who were also delegates). He sprinted to a waiting car at Pearson International Airport to escape them.

"It's not just 'I'm HIV-positive, give me medicine,' " said Francisco Rico-Martinez, a Salvadoran native and the co-founder of FCJ Refugee Centre, which has assisted some of the claimants. "In the case of Joaquin, it's a long life of discrimination and persecution because you are gay. It is hard for Canadians to contemplate the level of violence that permeates El Salvador."

Adds Prof. Macklin: "These cases are often more about persecution arising out of being stigmatized for being HIV-positive as well as gay or lesbian, and politically active."

In 2005, 180 Salvadorans sought asylum in Canada; the acceptance rate was 32 per cent.

Article Source
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060916.PROFILEAIDS18/TPStory/National

September 15, 2006 | 11:10 AM Comments  0 comments



Up to 150 delegates to last month's T.O. conference have filed refugee claims
Related to country: Canada


A top Eritrean AIDS activist is among some 150 delegates of last month's international AIDS conference in Toronto who stayed behind and filed refugee claims in a bid to remain in Canada, immigration officials confirm.

Amanuel Tesfamichael, 32, had to sprint to a waiting car at Pearson airport to escape Eritrean agents as he arrived for the AIDS 2006 conference.

Most of the claimants have the deadly disease and include a large group of women from hardest-hit South Africa and citizens of El Salvador, Eritrea, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

"It feels good to be free," said Tesfamichael, who has the disease. "I like Canada and the people here."

The activist, who is founder of Eritrea's 6,000-member association for people living with AIDS, was allowed to travel to Canada on the condition he surrender his passport to two government minders, who were also delegates.

Tesfamichael said he was given his passport for processing on landing at Pearson and managed to bolt to a pre-determined meeting with men who spirited him to a waiting car.

"I was only allowed to leave my homeland for 10 days," he said. "The government didn't want me to leave the country."
Many of the claimants are staying at Toronto hostels awaiting hearing dates before an immigration board, officials said.

24,000 PARTICIPANTS
Canadian immigration spokesman Karen Shadd-Evelyn confirmed yesterday that up to 150 claims were received from the 24,000 participants at the Aug. 13-18 conference.
"We can't talk about specific claims," Shadd-Evelyn said. "We cannot release their country of origins or other information."

Francisco Rico-Martinez, of the FCJ Refugee Centre in Toronto, said three of the claimants -- Tesfamichael, a man from El Salvador and a woman from Zimbabwe -- were referred to his "gender-friendly" hostel.

"Both of the men have AIDS," Rico-Martinez said yesterday. "They face persecution and discrimination at home."

He said Tesfamichael faces persecution or jail if he returns to Eritrea for violating the 10-day permit.
Rico-Martinez said the claimants are treated in their native countries as outcasts, or have little or no medicine. He said some are discriminated against by doctors, who don't want to treat them.

Joan Anderson, a senior adviser of AIDS 2006, said 14,000 of the delegates were from outside North America.
Melissa Anderson, of the Immigration and Refugee Board, said it'll take about a year before the claimants find out if they're accepted in Canada. About 48% of all claimants are accepted in Canada as refugees.

Article Quote: It "It feels good to be free" and in Canada, says activist Amanuel Tesfamichael, who bolted from his Eritrean government handlers at Pearson airport after arriving for last month's international AIDS conference. (Alex Urosevic/Sun)

Article Written By TOM GODFREY, TORONTO SUN Fri, September 1, 2006

Link to original article http://www.torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA/2006/09/01/1792238-sun.html

September 6, 2006 | 9:38 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Constables to Wed, as Canada Blog's Gay Wedding!
Related to country: Canada


by SALISON AULD --Canadian Press
HALIFAX — A day before Canada marks its 139th birthday, a young couple will wed in a ceremony that is sure to cast one of the country's most iconic symbols in a whole new light.

Dressed in the RCMP's distinctive scarlet coats, Constable Jason Tree and Constable David Connors will exchange vows before a justice of the peace and a troop of other Mounties also clad in the famous red serge.

Reaction to the wedding — the first between two male RCMP officers — has befuddled the couple, who have been overwhelmed by interview requests from reporters and congratulations from well-wishers they've never met.
“We don't see our wedding as anything different or special,” Constable Tree, 27, said in an interview from his detachment in Meteghan on Nova Scotia's southwest coast. “Our goal was to get married, not have an international media story.

“I fail to see the big deal.”

Constable Tree, who has been an RCMP officer for six years, said he has received about 60 letters from strangers congratulating him on the big event and praising the couple for publicly proclaiming their love — and doing so in uniform.

He's heard the jokes that refer to the couple as the Brokeback Mounties, while headlines blurt out that this Mountie has gotten his man.

Blogs, too, are full of opinions.

“What!!! Neither is wearing white? Who has the garter belt and bouquet? As long as they can catch the bad guys, I don't care who they snuggle down with at night,” a blogger wrote recently.

The pair decided in January to set a date for the ceremony, which will be held in a hall in Yarmouth, a town of 8,000 in western Nova Scotia that is best known for its lobster industry. They will recite their own vows before about 100 family members and friends.

Constable Tree said that he and Constable Connors, who works in nearby Yarmouth, never intended to make a political statement.

“I don't think there's any difference between us and anyone else who wants to get married,” said Constable Tree, who met Constable Connors more than eight years ago at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton.
“I'm interested in getting married with David, and I guess I'm not interested in engaging in a political debate or anything like that.”

Like it or not, the couple's nuptials will be held in advance of another heated political debate over the fate of same-sex marriage in Canada, which was recognized by Parliament a year ago.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has pledged to hold a free vote in the House of Commons this fall to determine whether the issue should be revisited.

The move infuriated gay-rights activists, who seized on the Mountie marriage as a public rebuke of the Tories' agenda.
“I think these Mounties are sending a message to the government that we are not going to let Harper dictate the natural progression of our relationships,” Gemma Hickey, president of Egale Canada, said from St. John's.

“It flies in the face of every negative stereotype about gay men.”

Environics Research released a poll last week that suggested a majority of Canadians accept gay marriage and oppose reopening the issue in the House of Commons.
The survey, conducted on behalf of Canadians for Equal Marriage, said 62 per cent of respondents felt that the same-sex marriage question had been settled. Only 27 per cent said they wanted it reopened.

Meanwhile, Mr. Harper has issued a gag order to his MPs, instructing them not to comment on the Mounties' marriage in a bid to avoid controversy.

However, Constable Tree said that the RCMP have been supportive of his relationship since he joined the force.
Sergeant Frank Skidmore, a spokesman for the force in Halifax, said the organization is trying to reflect a broader spectrum of the Canadian community.

“It's the law in this country, so it's accepted by the RCMP,” he said. “The RCMP welcomes a work force that is representative of Canadian society. People look at Canadian icons with their own eyes and if it changes it for them then so be it.

“But it certainly doesn't change anything for us. The RCMP's proud of its ability to be flexible and adaptive to shifting priorities.”

In Yarmouth, where Constable Connors has patrolled the streets for the past three years, local residents don't seem to be making much of a fuss over the wedding.
Brian Smith, warden of the area, said he hasn't heard much in the coffee shops or on the streets since the story first broke in May.

“It isn't a subject that's brought up daily here,” he said. “It's just not a topic around here.”

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060630.wmounties30/EmailBNStory/National/home


July 20, 2006 | 9:33 AM Comments  0 comments



The YMCA as a "peace builder!
Related to country: Canada


July 12th, 2007 news of the bomb blast in Mumbai reminds us all that our world is not safe and peaceful for many.

It also reminds us that our world is becoming smaller and more interconnected.

Living in Toronto, Canada is indeed a privilege and a responsibility.

The Greater Toronto Area (GTA) has 100,000’s of residents who at one time called Mumbai their home and is still home to their family and friends. I am certain that many people are anxious for news of their loved ones and their well-being. Our thoughts and wishes for peace are with them today.

Events like this bring awareness to global issues and insecurities but also raise tensions and conflict. Events like these are a reminder to us all that the work of the YMCA of Greater Toronto is as a “peace builder” among individuals, groups, communities and globally. It is important work.

I am proud to say that a number of YMCA representatives from across Canada are participating in the YMCA World Alliance meeting in Durban, South Africa. Increasingly, our partner YMCA’s are working to alleviate and bring constructive solutions to violence, HIV/AIDS and other issues of global importance. Through YMCA international we are helping in these efforts.

July 17, 2006 | 10:58 AM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


Mexico now Canada's largest source of refugee claimants
Related to country: Canada


OTTAWA (CP) - Over 3,500 Mexicans asked Canada for political asylum last year, for the first time making the NAFTA partner the largest source for refugee claimants.

Written by Celeste Mackenzie, Canadian Press Published: Tuesday, July 11, 2006

But Canadian officials didn't buy the claims of persecution and harrassment of 81 per cent of the applicants. There were more approvals for refugees from Colombia and China.

A sample of Immigration and Refugee Board decisions on Mexicans describes claims of domestic abuse, state failure to ensure protection, persecution due to sexual preference, and threats from security forces and organized crime.

No statistics are kept on why claims are accepted or rejected, but many are believed to be simply seeking better working and living conditions.

"Many do apply, often at the suggestion of unscrupulous immigration consultants who, depending on the price, will concoct a whole story and documentation for them," said refugee advocate Francisco Rico, co-director of the FCJ Refugee Centre in Toronto.

Rico says that because these sorts of cases largely fail, they bring suspicion on Mexicans who really need asylum.

"Canadian authorities judge Mexicans much harsher than claimants from other countries and put a greater onus on them to produce more thorough documentation," he said.

Both Amnesty International and the U.S. State department noted no overall improvement in human rights protection during Vicente Fox's presidency that began in 2000.

The U.S. report noted a marked increase in violence related to narcotics trafficking and said violence against women is a nationwide problem. Police torture was noted in both reports, and Amnesty said the judicial system failed to protect the rights of victims of crime and suspects. Attacks and harassment of homosexuals were also reported.

The cases are notably different from what was going on pre-2000, says Peter Showler of the University of Ottawa's Human Rights Research and Education Centre.

Showler said there were a lot more claims of political persecution when the PRI party held an iron grip on power for more than 70 years.

"Now the claims tend to refer to the state's failure to protect-often in cases of criminality and organized crime, when someone for example, has somehow come into disfavour with authorities and criminals," Showler said.

Benjamin Santamaria is familiar with that scenario.

The Toronto author and former Mexican human-rights ombudsman was granted refugee status after receiving death threats related to a case he was investigating. The accused were friends of state officials, and involved in drug trafficking.

He bemoans the "false refugees" who make up stories, such as being gay and under threat, simply to gain entry for economic reasons.

"This is a pure lie. Homosexuals are discriminated against, harassed and even robbed, but that their lives are in danger and the only solution to leave the country is a farce," Santamaria said.
Those who really need protection in Mexico and Latin America in general, often have no idea about asylum, and how to request it, much less the money needed to buy a plane ticket to Canada."

Implementation of the U.S.-Canada Safe Third Country Agreement last year meant 58-per-cent fewer Colombians were eligible to claim asylum. The agreement makes it difficult for people who have already been in the U.S. to seek refugee status across the border in Canada.

Mexicans, meanwhile, can fly directly to Canada without a visa.

Rico of the refugee centre says about 30 newly arrived Mexicans come to his centre a month.

"About five years ago, it started becoming known in Mexico that no visa was needed."

© The Canadian Press 2006 Link to article http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=a549c877-bf71-4a44-a772-89a5e76bbeac&k=55161&p=1

July 14, 2006 | 12:14 PM Comments  0 comments



Lawyer alleges refugee official biased
Related to country: Canada


Had motive to deny claim, court told
MARINA JIMÉNEZ the Globe and Mail

Immigration and Refugee Board member Shamshuddin Alidina was motivated to reject the asylum bids of a gay Mexican couple to extend his time on the board, according to a document filed in Federal Court last month.

Mr. Alidina heard the claim on Jan. 27, the day his four-year term on the board expired, and petitioned for extra time to decide the case. Immigration lawyer Michael Battista alleges that Mr. Alidina was biased against the two claimants, who are both HIV-positive.

"There was an unexplained three-hour delay in the commencement of the hearing . . . the applicants believe that during this lengthy delay, board member Alidina was seeking approval to write negative reasons in their case, prior to hearing the applicants' oral testimony," Mr. Battista said in his application for judicial review of the decision.

Board members are paid between $104,600 and $107,300 a year, and are usually appointed to terms of two to five years. They may request extra time to finish writing decisions after their term is up, and Access to Information documents show Mr. Alidina was granted 16.5 extra days to finish work on 32 cases. He was recently re-appointed to a three-year term.

The board allocates a full day for a complex written decision, and while negative decisions require written reasons, positive decisions are usually delivered orally.

Some lawyers don't like this discretionary policy, said Raoul Boulakia, head of the Refugee Lawyers Association.

"The policy does encourage board members to delay making decisions and gives greater financial reward to complex decisions, which are in practise negative ones."

Mr. Battista said that with a drastically reduced work load, there is no justification for any board member to hear a case on his or her final day. Last year, 20,753 people filed refugee claims, compared with a high of 43,000 in 2001.

Melissa Anderson, a board spokesperson, would not comment on the case. But she said the board's guidelines allowing members an additional eight weeks after their terms have ended are not uncommon for administrative tribunals dealing with thousands of cases.

"This practice provides us with the flexibility we need when facing times of operational pressure. In recent months, as government was in transition, some delays were inevitable in member appointments or reappointments," Ms. Anderson said.

In his 14-page decision, Mr. Alidina found that there was adequate state protection for the two claimants, who claimed persecution on the basis of membership in the particular social group of HIV-positive, gay Mexican males.
State authorities in Mexico are making serious efforts to train police and to discipline them for misconduct, his March 22, 2006 ruling noted. Mexico has a national anti-discrimination law that includes protection for sexual preference, and the government subsidizes the cost of AIDS medication, he said.

In his request for judicial review, Mr. Battista argued that the board member failed to deal with the claimants' fear of returning to Mexico. Mexican society remains highly prejudiced against HIV-positive individuals, he said, and there is no protection against the stigma and discrimination they face, which constitutes persecution.

Mr. Alidina, an engineer with a degree from the University of East Africa, also served as chief minister at the Ismaili Willowdale Jamatkhana and is a member of the Aga Khan's conciliation and arbitration board in Ontario, according to his biography.

Mr. Boulakia said he could not comment on Mr. Battista's complaint but that "in my experience Mr. Alidina is a fair member with a good work ethic."

Link to original article http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060705.IMMIGRATION05/TPStory/?query=gay+refugees
Posted on May 7, 06

July 11, 2006 | 4:01 PM Comments  0 comments



Gay Muslims focus of exhibit
Related to country: Canada


Photos highlight inner struggle `We need to be more visible'
PRITHI YELAJA Toronto Satar STAFF REPORTER http://www.thestar.com

Slipping on the ridah, a pastel-coloured hijab, makes Farzana feel like she's in drag.

As a Bora Muslim who also happens to be a lesbian, she wears the head-to-toe covering about once a year when she goes to mosque, along with a pendant that belonged to her late mother inscribed with an Arabic phrase praising Ali, a descendant of the prophet Mohammed.

"It's familiar and foreign at the same time," says Farzana, 35, of the ridah, explaining the drag reference. Although she says she has received death threats because of her orientation, she agreed to be photographed wearing both items for Conflicted, a photo exhibit at the Toronto Free Gallery on Queen St. E. that focuses on portraits of gay Muslims. It runs until the end of June.

All of the elegant, mostly black-and-white photos in the Pride Week exhibit — bound to be controversial despite the absence of couples or nudity — feature subjects pictured with symbols of Islam. There is Asif Kamal, for example, with the name of Allah tattooed on his back. (Tattoos of any kind are forbidden in Islam.)

"These are not props. This is who they are. Coming to terms with their sexuality and faith has been a painful process," says self-taught photographer Asad Rahman, 35, who immigrated to Toronto from Bangladesh in 2001 and belongs to Salaam, a Toronto-based support and advocacy group for self-described "queer Muslims."

The exhibit's title refers to the inner and outer struggle that gay Muslims face, says Rahman. "Through my art, the message is it's not just okay to be gay and Muslim. It's fabulous."

However, he adds, "I already got some hate mail. They said, `You should keep your filth covered.'"

Farzana, a social worker who asked that her full name not be used, took the risk to make a point.

"If my generation doesn't come out to their families and the community, we're not moving ahead. As people of colour living in a white majority society we're automatically thrust in the role of teacher," she says.

"Certainly, among more traditional and fundamental Muslims, we are being sinful just by existing."

In most Muslim countries, homosexuality is a crime punishable by imprisonment or death. Canada has a history of accepting refugees, including Rahman, who face persecution in their homelands because of their sexual orientation.

As a gay Muslim man, El-Farouk Khaki says he has had to come out of the closet twice — once to declare his sexuality and a second time, in the furor after 9/11, to reclaim his faith in the face of conservative Muslims who would speak on behalf of Islam and condemn his existence.

"It's like a double outing," says Khaki, a 42-year-old immigration lawyer who came to Canada from Tanzania via England at age 10. Before 9/11, he was an "Eid Muslim," one who rarely went to mosque except on special occasions.

"Many of us were in the closet as Muslims because we felt alienated from the fundamentalist Islamic leaders. What 9/11 did was force us to assert our identity as Muslims. They (fundamentalists) don't represent me. Islam is just as much a part of me, so why should they (fundamentalists) usurp the narrative?"

Khaki appears in the exhibit wearing a skin-tight chiffon shirt that makes it appear that his whole upper body is covered in colourful tattoos. "I actually have some tattoos, but not that many," he says with a laugh.

Gay Muslims who have grappled with these issues have a responsibility to speak out, says Suhail Abualsameed, 34, a youth worker who emigrated from Jordan in 2001 and appears in the exhibit wearing a kuffeyeh scarf.

"Being gay and Muslim is not a contradiction. We need to be more visible so others know they're not alone."

Coming out as a lesbian to family and friends, who became supportive, has been easier than dealing with the larger Muslim community, says Farzana. "Although there are traditional notions about how we're supposed to live as Muslims," she says, "in our culture there's also a strong value placed on family — and maybe that overrides everything else."

June 23, 2006 | 9:47 AM Comments  0 comments



Canada Sends an Open 'Wedding Invitation' to Gay and Lesbian Couples
Related to country: Canada


Canadian Tourism Commission Launches New Integrated Marketing Program

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 2 /PRNewswire/ -- The Canadian Tourism Commission launched a new gay and lesbian advertising campaign on May 15 with a destination wedding invitation for U.S. same-sex couples. The country is one of few in the world to extend full marriage equality to all people. The ad first appeared in the May issue of Passport magazine, as part of a gay and lesbian integrated marketing program that will also include sponsorship of LGBT film festivals, the Human Rights Campaign and special events in select markets across the U.S.

Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver are among the favorite destinations for gay and lesbian travelers. The provinces of Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia all legalized same-sex marriage prior to federal extension of marriage equality, with a significant percentage of all marriage licenses issued to same-sex couples going to Americans. In fact, in some cases Americans have outnumbered Canadians seeking licenses. The latest campaign recognizes that marriage is just one more reason to visit Canada, whether travelers plan to wed or not.

"There are so many reasons to visit Canada. All travelers are welcome and any traveler can tailor a travel experience that is just right for them," said Susan Iris, Vice President, U.S. for the Canadian Tourism Commission. "We have great cities that offer everything from European charm to a modern fusion of culture, and all that is reflected in our food, shopping and atmosphere. We believe that is why so many people are choosing to come see Canada."

Canada has established a reputation as one of the most gay-friendly countries in the world. Marriage is a significant indicator of the hospitality in store for gay and lesbian visitors whether they are drawn to the country by wedding bells, fine dining, some of the biggest parties and festivals in the world, or world-class skiing and outdoor experiences.

Industry led, market driven and research based, the Canadian Tourism Commission is a Crown corporation that works in partnership with the private and public tourism sectors to market Canada as a four-season destination. To access research and information focused on and for the tourism industry, please visit www.canadatourism.com. To contact the Canadian Tourism Commission or to plan a visit, log on to www.canada.travel/gay.

Media contact: Valerie Edmonds
Weber Shandwick
212-445-8140
vedmonds@webershandwick.com

June 22, 2006 | 11:43 AM Comments  0 comments



Who's your daddy?
Related to country: Canada


Jun. 17, 2006. 01:00 AM
KEVIN LITTLE
GUEST COLUMN The Toronto Star

It can be confusing to be a father these days. What is expected of us? The stereotype says we are the source of discipline, rough housing and barbecues. It is silly, but these old assumptions remain with us. My dad offered his three boys patience, unconditional love, and presence, but there were other role models for me as well.

A close friend of mine has adopted three daughters from India. Mark lives in Springfield, Mo., where he is a regional director with Habitat for Humanity. Mark recalls taking his daughters to the local grocery store where he was confronted by an irate mother.

"You should be ashamed of yourself," she declared, without having ever met Mark before.

It was obvious that none of Mark's daughters was a biological sister to the others. This woman assumed that Mark was the kind of man who spread his seed around.

"Imagine, three different women, three different mothers. Have you no sense of decency?" she demanded.

With a deadpan only Mark could muster, he replied, "Yes, and it's much worse. All of them have different fathers as well."

Mark's family is hardly conventional, but neither are others I have come to admire. I take my daughter swimming every Saturday. While we were in the pool I saw Lucy chatting with a friend. When she dog-paddled over to me I overheard her friend tell one of his dads, "Lucy has a mommy."

In my daughter's world some of her friends have two daddies, some have two mommies, some have one parent, and some are raised by grandparents. But all are families.

In my denomination, the word "inclusive" is as overused as "giving 110 per cent" is by NHL players. Not all families are models of the kind of relationship I seek to build with my daughter. I want her to know she is loved, unconditionally, but I also want her to know this love is abundant and best expressed by loving others. That's why my partner Kimberley reminds Lucy at every turn about consideration. It's why I remind Lucy about the newcomer in her classroom, and the volunteering we Christians do to build the New Jerusalem.

On the second Sunday of January every year, I preach on baptism. On that occasion, I remind the congregation that through the rite of baptism we become a new family, a certain kind of family. Jesus himself saw this. You will recall his retort to his biological parents when they found him busy in the temple, "I am about my parent's (father's) business."

Or when told that Mary and his brothers were outside calling his name, he replied, "Who are my mother and my brothers? Those that do the work of the movement are my family."

Kimberley becomes furious with the news media in Canada when they refer to our Governor General and her "adopted" daughter. It is not necessary to use the word "adopted" but I know the reason we do. The natural tug of loving our own is all-consuming. I see it everywhere. People will give their last dime to a son who has the stewardship sense of a baby boomer with a credit card in Vegas.

But that same family will begrudge money to welfare recipients and want an accounting of every last cent. Churches that can't raise money for an outreach ministry can accumulate big bucks to replace a beloved stain glass window faster than you can say "social club."

Through the sacrament of baptism we are adopted as God's own, given a new set of lenses so that we might see the world as Jesus did.

What does all of this have to do with Father's Day? In the Maritimes, people often ask, "Who's your father?" In our culture, this strong sense of being connected through your father lineage is key to your identity as a person. What if we could change that with this new set of lenses, so that our sense of family had less to do with a biological father and more to do with a commitment to be present to all of creation?

The real test of my fatherhood lies not in my affection, loyalty or generosity to Lucy but in how my love for her is equally demonstrated in the way I treat the refugee in Sudan, the woman in the halfway house in my neighbourhood, the gay men in my church who want to be married and adopt children.

When Kimberley and I were going through the adoption process, one of the red flags raised about me was the amount of time I spent volunteering in the community for my church, on local non-profits, working for food banks and advocating for the homeless.

The social worker wondered what kind of message this would send my daughter. I think in this country, where children grow up thinking "it's all about me," watching and participating with a daddy who sees the family in more places than his backyard is a good thing. In fact, I think it is a spiritual thing.

Perhaps we fathers who see the world as our family ought to start a new tradition of fatherhood. Take our barbecues out of our enclosed backyards and put them on the street in front of our houses. Invite everyone!

To all those fathers making a difference in their communities, Happy Father's Day!

Kevin Little is a United Church minister serving a Toronto congregation.

June 19, 2006 | 10:15 AM Comments  0 comments



PROCLIMATION: Toronto Pride Week June 19 - 25, 2006
Related to country: Canada


WHEREAS Toronto's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Two Spirited and Transsexual Pride Week is one of Toronto's largest and most important cultural events - in this, our year to celebrate culture - playing an important part in our City's economic vitality by attracting thousands of visitors for the parades and a week of celebration.

Toronto has a strong, vibrant and proud queer community - the third largest in North America - which plays an important part in the rich fabric of our diversity.Toronto Gay Pride Toronto City Council and the people of Toronto are in the forefront of efforts to establish a caring, compassionate society based on the inherent dignity of all its members. We are taking a leadership role aimed at eliminating discrimination and disadvantage and by recognizing that a fundamental strength of our community lies in our unique racial and ethno-cultural diversity.

Pride Week celebrations contribute to reducing discrimination and other barriers faced by this community with respect to employment, housing, public safety, policing, health care, education and recognition of family relationships.

NOW THEREFORE, I, Mayor David Miller, on behalf of Toronto City Council, do hereby proclaim June 19 - 25, 2006 as "Pride Week" in the City of Toronto and encourage everyone to join in this 26th celebration of achievement, equality and fabulousness.


Mayor David Miller

June 16, 2006 | 12:44 PM Comments  0 comments



Whats the Big Deal!
Related to country: Canada


The decision by the provincial government to include a Grade 12 elective course that looks at social issues, including gay issues, will certainly raise some controversy.

The not-so tolerant in our society will immediately condemn this—“Why is the government teachin’ our kids how to be homos?”

So what’s the big deal? What the government is proposing is a Grade 12 elective course. (“Elective,” by the way, means a course that students have the option to take.) The course will focus on social justice issues, including sexual orientation, family structure, gender and race.

Get ready for the hue and cry. “My church says homosexuality is a sin.” “Homosexuality is a crime where I come from.” Well, this is Canada, folks, a land full of people of different races and backgrounds who are learning to live together.

The fact is there are homosexuals in the world. What’s so wrong about discussing the issues with 17-year-olds? Isn’t it better to show students that the world is made up of different people? Isn’t it better to teach our children to be tolerant and accepting of diversity as opposed to growing up and becoming narrow-minded bigots?

BLAME PEOPLE, NOT RELIGION FOR TERROR

The arrest of 17 people in Ontario accused of planning terrorist attacks on Canadian targets underscores the fact that Canadians need to be vigilant, while at the same time not taking such vigilance to the levels of paranoia seen in the United States.

As Spanish and English commuters and vacationers in Bali have found out, terrorism is a very real threat and Canada is not immune from such attacks. Increased security measures, such as tighter restrictions at airports and potential targets, are warranted.

However, violating human rights and raising hysteria through terror alerts are not helpful in fighting terrorism. Nor is the predictable reaction to immigrants and members of the Muslim community.

It’s true that Canada needs to screen refugee claimants better, but that is a criticism that can be applied to all western countries, including the United States.

And the fact that the 17 people charged are Muslims does not mean that members of the Islamic community deserve a backlash. There are many Catholics, Protestants and Jews who ignore “Thou shalt not kill” to suit their own purposes. Don’t blame the religion for violence, blame the people.

EDITORIAL posted on the Richmond Review Jun 08 2006

June 9, 2006 | 9:13 AM Comments  0 comments



Mounties Set for Force's First Same-Sex Wedding
Related to country: Canada


TORONTO -- It promises to be a grand June wedding, two scarlet-coated officers of the famed Royal Canadian Mounted Police standing before a justice of the peace with an escort of similarly spiffy Mounties observing the nuptials on the eve of Canada Day, a national holiday.

When the two constables become the first male Mounties to marry each other, the grumpiest witness-from-afar might well be Prime Minister Stephen Harper. The planned union of Jason Tree and David Connors in Nova Scotia on June 30 has cast a spotlight on Harper's pledge to his conservative backers to try to roll back same-sex marriage laws.

Harper has not spoken publicly about the upcoming wedding and has ordered his party members to shut up about the matter, an attempt to silence lawmakers that has served to draw more attention to the issue while sparking complaints about the prime minister's heavy-handedness.

"I think it's great if we change the public perception," said Tree, 27, who patrols a stretch of rural fishing communities along the Bay of Fundy. "If the public sees the RCMP as representing the diversity of the community, that is good."

About 25 miles away, Connors, 28, helps to police Yarmouth, a town of 8,000. The two men met in college eight years ago and have been partners since.

Tree said he had been open about their relationship since he joined the force six years ago, and "from the outset, I have never had a single problem." The force has assigned the two men close together, as it does with other couples, and fellow officers "have all been great," Tree said from their home in Meteghan, southwest of Halifax.

"There does exist that social stereotype of a kind of straight, masculine image of police," he added. "We say you can be in the force and be gay."

Tree and Connors decided to join thousands of other same-sex couples getting married in Canada. In 2003, Ontario's highest court ruled that same-sex couples could not be denied marriage. Courts in other provinces followed. Last July, Canada's Parliament bowed to the judicial momentum and narrowly approved same-sex marriages throughout the country.

But the Liberal-led government was replaced in February by Harper's Conservative Party, which includes staunch opponents of gay marriage. The party platform included a pledge to ask Parliament to reopen the issue. But Harper has been in no hurry; he said Friday he would introduce the resolution sometime in the fall.

"I think he realizes it is not a popular debate for him, not one that would win him votes," said Kaj Hasselriis of Canadians for Equal Marriage, an Ottawa-based gay rights organization. "The majority of Canadians think this issue is settled and don't want to reopen it."

But the marriage of Tree and Connors has clashed head-on with the foremost icon of Canada's national image of virile, outdoorsy strength -- the square-jawed Mountie of popular lore.

"This busts some stereotypes," Hasselriis said. "We talk about the Mounties getting their man, but I don't think a lot of people thought about getting their man this way."

The image of the 22,561-member RCMP has already evolved. Women joined in 1974; they now make up 17 percent of the police officers. In 1990, Sikh Mounties were permitted to trade the flat-brimmed Mountie hat for their traditional turban. But Tree and Connors's uniformed matrimony goes too far for some.

"This does nothing to strengthen the family," said Dave Bylsma, president of the Ontario Council of the Christian Heritage Party. "Personally, it doesn't matter to me if they are RCMP or dogcatchers or garbagemen. But they are obviously using the fact that they are Mounties to rub our nose in it."

When Harper last month ordered his Conservative caucus members not to speak about the matter, he further soured relations with Canadian reporters over what they call his unprecedented attempts to control the news. The public safety minister, Stockwell Day, ostensibly the government's only authorized spokesman on the matter, has declined comment.

"If they speak about gay rights, same-sex marriage, abortion, the risk is the Conservative Party will be portrayed as extremist," said David Rayside, a professor of political science at the University of Toronto and director of the Center for Sexual Diversity Studies. "In the United States, they would not pass as extremists. But in Canada, they would. There is a gap between Canadian and American attitudes."

The U.S. military, for example, does not officially permit gay relationships. In Canada, two servicemen were married on an air force base last June, and the RCMP says it has no objection to the upcoming ceremony.

"There's a law in this country, and this ought to be considered a regular event," said Sgt. Frank Skidmore, a spokesman for the Nova Scotia RCMP detachments.

"Just look at the last 10 years to see how far we have come in Canada," said Tree. "I'm hoping some day soon that this will die down."

By Doug Struck
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, June 6, 2006; Page A11

Link to article
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/05/AR2006060501178.html


June 7, 2006 | 9:46 AM Comments  0 comments



Immigrant Rights Movement Lands in Canada
Related to country: Canada


A group of Filipino would-be immigrants to Canada attend an orientation seminar to familiarize themselves with Canadian culture and weather.

Canadian organizations are hoping to capitalize on the momentum of the immigrant rights movement that has swept the U.S. in recent months to raise the profile of the plight of undocumented workers in Canada.

On May 27, rallies similar to those held in the U.S. all spring were held in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Ottawa and Fredericton to protest an apparent recent rise in illegal worker deportations. Activists also seek to press the new Conservative government to give legal recognition to the country's non-status labour force.

Since taking power in January, the Conservative government has taken a hard line on illegal immigration, stepping up efforts to deport transgressors. Immigrant rights activists say that as a result, the Canada Border Services Agency has become much stricter with its application of the law.
"Examples have been going to schools and using children as bait to get to their parents, going to malls and asking people for identification…These are tactics that we had never heard of before, but in the last three or four months we're hearing more and more that the CBSA are using these tactics to get to undocumented people and to deport people," says Sonja Nerad, Community Health Program Manager with Access Alliance.

Craig Fortier, an organizer with No One Is Illegal Toronto, calls these methods "U.S.-style enforcement" giving rise to a "climate of fear" in non-status communities where people are afraid to leave their homes to get vital medical care or are keeping their children back from school.

"The decision to remove someone from Canada is not taken lightly. The CBSA has an obligation to remove any person that has been issued a removal order… as soon as possible," says CBSA spokesperson Cara Prest.

Despite some parallels with the U.S. situation, Liberal Member of Parliament Mario Silva, Associate Critic for Canadian Heritage, thinks that in terms of magnitude, there's little comparison between the two countries. Canadian estimates for non-status workers are anywhere between one quarter to half a million people, compared to approximately 11 million in the U.S. "So it's a totally different scale," says Silva, who attended the May 27 march near his Toronto riding.

Another difference is that Canada does not have an issue of porous borders as is the case between the U.S. and Mexico. Many undocumented workers in Canada arrive legally, as visitors, temporary workers or students, and then overstay their visas.

Many of the illegal labourers in Canada are here for years, enrolling their children in schools and becoming part of mainstream society.

"Most of these people are really well integrated, they have families, they really contribute to society. So Canada needs them," says Silva.

This is particularly true of the construction industry, says Silva, which is a primary beneficiary of
non-status labour. Canada is currently experiencing a construction boom and there is a serious shortage of skilled workers to fill the need.

"The average age of construction workers now is 50 years old, and we're going to have a huge crisis in another 10 years," notes Silva.

In British Columbia alone, 20,000 additional construction workers will be needed over the next three years to prepare for the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. There's a huge labour crunch in Ontario, and in Winnipeg they are scrambling for factory workers. Help wanted signs are ubiquitous in Alberta, where immigrant workers are also in high demand to work in the oil sands.

The Liberal government was planning to increase immigration targets by roughly 40,000 people per year – a plan which the Conservatives have now scrapped – to meet shortfalls in the labour market.

"I think it's a contraction – many are these industries are crying out about labour shortages," says Deena Ladd, Workers Action Centre Coordinator. Ladd says that, similar to the situation in the U.S., most non-status workers are doing jobs considered undesirable by many Canadians, such as construction, cleaning, delivery, kitchen work, care-giving etc.

One way the shortages could be solved, Ladd argues, is by regularizing non-status labourers. "These workers are all surviving – they're working, they aren't accessing benefits. They are making huge contributions to the economy and aren't being recognised for it."

In an interview with CTV News, Immigration Minister Monte Solberg defended the government's stance against recognizing non-status immigrants.

"We have an obligation to the hundreds of thousands of people waiting to get into this country to make sure we don't reward those who don't play by the rules," he said.
But supporters of regularization—granting legal recognition to people already working in Canada—argue that the queue-jumping argument doesn't make sense because there is no queue for working class jobs.

"There is no queue for working people in this country. There is definitely a queue for professionals and people who have the money to buy their way into Canada, but there's no queue for working people. You can't get into Canada using the points system," says Fortier.

Canada's point system for determining immigrant eligibility strongly favours high levels of education, strong language abilities and experience in certain highly-skilled categories of employment. Low scores in any two of those categories guarantees exclusion through normal channels. The point system has been criticized for creating an immigrant population packed with engineers and other professionals, while failing to attract enough of the trades people and labourers who are so sorely needed.
But while the Conservative are taking a tough stance on non-status immigrant, the government has also taken measures to make it easier for some newcomers to work. For example, new regulations allow foreign students to take off-campus jobs, immigration landing fees have been cut in half, and steps have been taken to streamline the citizenship process.

This article written by Cindy Drukier and Joan Delaney, Epoch Times Toronto and Victoria Staff, May 31, 2006

Copyright 2000 - 2005 Epoch Times International

June 6, 2006 | 9:13 AM Comments  0 comments



17 May, the International Day Against Homophobia
Related to country: Canada


On 17 May 1990, the General Assembly of the World Health Organization (WHO) removed homosexuality from their list of mental disorders.

The fight for the recognition of equal rights for lesbian gay, bisexual and transgender people did not end there though.

Today around 80 countries in the world still criminalize homosexuality and condemn consensual same sex acts with imprisonment, of these 9 (Afghanistan, Iran, Mauritania, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, United Arab Emirates and Yemen) still have the death penalty. Discrimination on the ground of sexual orientation and gender identity is still not recognized formally by the member states of the United Nations (even though human rights mechanisms such as the Human Rights Committee have repeatedly condemned discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity).

ILGA has been fighting against discrimination and for the recognition of equal rights of lesbian, gays, bisexual and transgender people since its creation in 1978. That is why ILGA is strongly committed to celebrating this second International Day Against Homophobia, launched one year ago by the International Day Against Homophobia Committee (IDAHO).

Visit and Support The ILGA

In 2005 IDAHO was celebrated in more than 40 countries, from France to Hong Kong. A large variety of initiatives were taken and they were widely covered by the Media. In Iran, in spite of the government brutal homophobia, IDAHO was talked about on numerous blogs and in thousands of emails. In Kiev, Ukraina, a huge balloon with ‘Say no to Homophobia” was let loose.

Help us to make this second International Day Against Homophobia a reality on the ground by organizing a party, a protest, or any other initiative that would raise the visibility of IDAHO in your communities.

ILGA was offered the unique chance to produce a TV spot for this special day in English, French and Dutch. Watch ILGA's spot against Homophobia.

In every country of the world, please pass the message: 17 May is the International Day Against Homophobia, it is of homophobia that you should be fearful, not homos!

Many thanks to DDB Belgium

Link to this Article on ILGA

May 24, 2006 | 10:13 AM Comments  0 comments



Stephen Lewis for the 2007 Nobel peace prize.

This is a petition asking the Nobel committee, to consider Canadian Stephen Lewis for the 2007 Nobel peace prize.

Support The Stephen Lewis Foundation

Stephen Lewis is the U.N.Secretary General's special envoy for H.I.V/ A.I.D.S. in Africa. He is working to obtain drugs for the treatment and prevention of this devastating disease and for financial assistance for those that are left to care for the children. He has visited & wept with the adults & those children that have been orphaned, by H.I.V./ A.I.D.S.He has consoled and supported the grandmothers ,that are attempting to rear those children. Stephen Lewis constantly advocates for womens rights, and the rights of sex trade workers;many of whom, are little more than children themselves.He seeks to provide condoms and cheap medications for their treatment.When parents have died, young women seek a means to earn enough money to support their siblings.The sex trade is the most lucrative way for an unskilled women to earn money.The sad result ,is that the young women also contract A.I.D.S. thereby leaving the very young without any support at all.Stephen Lewis advocates constantly with tenderness, intelligence and a saintly zeal, that is profoundly moving.Stephen Lewis needs recognition, not for himself, but for his cause. We would ask the committee to seriously consider Stephen Lewis for the 2007 Nobel Peace prize. As such, Africa would be put in the media spotlight, giving further credence to his campaign for change, in the lives of the poor and marginalised on the continent of Africa.

Further information on Stephen Lewis can be found at http://www.stephenlewisfoundation.org

www.stephenlewisfoundation.org He also has a book, entitled "Race against Time,"a compilation of his Massey lectures.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN THE ONLINE NOMINATION FORM http://www.petitiononline.com/Jambo/petition.html

May 19, 2006 | 3:59 PM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


U.S. Immigration Law Inhumane to Same-Sex Couples
Related to country: United States