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KENTUCKY EQUALITY FEDERATION SUPPORTS UNITED NATIONS STATEMENT
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Contact: Jordan Palmer, President
(877) KEF-5775 - Ext 5 (office)
People gathered in the state capitol
rotunda on December 10, 2008 to hear Governor
Steven Beshear's proclamation of Kentucky Human
Rights Day on the 60th anniversary of the
United Nations Universal Declaration of Human
Rights (UDHR).
Today, December 18,
2008 the United Nations General Assembly
will hear a critical statement on gay, lesbian,
bisexual, and transgender rights. The
statement, endorsed by more than 50 countries
across the globe calling for an end to rights
abuses based on sexual orientation and gender
identity.
"In 1948 the
world's nations set forth the promise of human
rights, but six decades later, the promise
remains unfulfilled for the gay, lesbian,
bisexual, and transgendered community," stated
Jordan Palmer, president of Kentucky Equality
Federation, a member of the International
Lesbian and Gay Association since
2006.
Kentucky Equality Federation issued an action
alert (click here
to view it) earlier this month urging Kentucky
citizens to contact the U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations, as well as the U.S. Department
of State to support the statement.
As a member
organization, Kentucky Equality Federation
represents the International Lesbian and Gay
Association ("ILGA") in the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Composed of over 600 member
organizations around the world, ILGA is to this
day the only international non-profit and
non-governmental community-based federation
dedicated to achieving equal rights for
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT)
people at the United Nations.
The draft
statement condemns violence, harassment,
discrimination, exclusion, stigmatization, and
prejudice based on sexual orientation and
gender identity. It also condemns killings and
executions, torture, arbitrary arrest, and
deprivation of economic, social, and cultural
rights on those grounds.
So far, 55 countries have signed onto the
General Assembly statement, including: Andorra,
Armenia, Australia, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Canada, Cape Verde, the Central African
Republic, Chile, Ecuador, Georgia, Iceland,
Israel, Japan, Liechtenstein, Mexico,
Montenegro, New Zealand, San Marino, Serbia,
Switzerland, the Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia, Uruguay, and Venezuela. All 27
member states of the European Union are also
signatories. The United States however, has
yet to commit itself to the
statement.
United Nations treaty bodies have called on
states to end discrimination in law and policy.
"It is appalling that the United States of
America, the only superpower in the world,
currently has no laws prohibiting
discrimination based on sexual orientation or
gender identity, nor does the Commonwealth of
Kentucky," stated Palmer. "We are very proud
however, and grateful that Governor
Beshear issued an executive order
prohibiting discrimination in Kentucky
government, and that the Kentucky Commission
on Human Rights finally has a gay member."
NOTE:
If you want to watch it live on December 18, 2008: http://www.un.org/webcast (Select the General Assembly picture below the screen)
- Print the agenda http://www.un.org/ga/third/63/ac363infdoc.pdf
You can also come back to the site the following days and look for agenda item 64(b) in the archived video for December 18, 2008: http://www.un.org/webcast/2008.html
