Yesterday the United Nations approved a resolution that condemns the
killing of LGBT persons either by governments or via "extrajudicial"
means such as hate crimes. Via
press release from the International Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission:
An international coalition of
organizations dedicated to human rights celebrated yesterday’s historic
vote in the Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly
(UNGA) to pass resolution condemning extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary
executions. The vote reversed the events of 2010 when the same body
voted to strip the resolution of reference to "sexual orientation." The
UNGA also expanded upon its commitment to the universality of human
rights by including "gender identity" for the first time in the
resolution’s history. The resolution, which is introduced biennially in
the Third Committee, urges States to protect the right to life of all
people, including by calling upon States to investigate killings based
on discriminatory grounds. It was introduced by the Government of Sweden
and co-sponsored by 34 states from around the world.
IGLHRC notes that the United Arab Emirates
attempted to strip
"sexual orientation" from the resolution on behalf of the Organization
of Islamic Cooperation, just as they did two years ago. (See the photo
above for the vote tally on that amendment.) They add: "Another failed
effort, led by the Holy See, would have stripped all specific references
to groups at high risk for execution; however it was never formally
introduced."
The governments of the United States, Brazil, and many others spoke in
favor of the resolution. IGLHRC reports that Egypt "spoke frequently" in
opposition. Japan broke its long silence on the issue with this
declaration: "We cannot tolerate any killings of persons because of
their sexual orientation or gender identity. Our delegation voted
against the proposed amendment to this paragraph because we think it is
meaningful to mention such killings from the perspective of protecting
the rights of LGBT people."
Read the
full resolution here.
Reposted from Joe