News

Dear Friends

The case of Zoliswa Nkonyana was postponed for the 26th time today. It will continue on the 23rd of September 2010. Zoliswa's mother will wait for at least 6 more months and Zoliswa's friend (a survivor of the brutal attack) will wait for at least 6 more months before Khayelitsha Regional Court acknowledges the wrong that was committed on the 4th of February 2006.

Scarcely two years before Zoliswa was tortured to death by 20 men, another young woman Leigh Matthews was kidnapped for ransom and eventually murdered. Our nation was shocked, indignant, supportive, retributive, frenzied - rightly so. We had been robbed of Leigh's potential. We did not take this lying down. We wrote, and called and talked. We watched every development of the case. Leigh's murderer was sentenced about 1 year after her death.

On Monday, 15 March 2010, we will march from the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) offices in Khayelitsha to the Khayelitsha Regional Court where the trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana's murder is set to resume. The march will start at 10h00. At 11h30 there will be a programme of speakers to address protestors outside the court.

Please bring along posters and please feel free to wear t-shirts representing your organisation or with appropriate messaging. Various alliance representatives will be monitoring the trial of the 9 accused of murdering Zoliswa Nkonyana.

The march will be attended by the Coalition to End Discrimination, Treatment Action Campaign, Social Justice Coalition, Freegender, Triangle Project and other organisations and individuals.

Getting There

Buses will leave from UCT (Tugwell stop) at 09:30. Those travelling with their own transport can rendezvous with the bus and follow us to Khayelitsha. The buses will drive back from the Regional Court to UCT at 12:30.

A map to the TAC offices can be found here.

Zanele Muholi's "Being"Zanele Muholi's "Being"

Open letter to Minister Lulu Xingwana from activists and civil society groupings

The Joint Working Group (JWG), a network Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) organisations and many other organisations and individuals across South Africa have been following with great concern the discussions around the walk out of Minister Lulu Xingwana from the Innovative Women exhibition in August of last year. We were particularly interested to read the official statement issues by the Minister on the 4th March and her subsequent comments. We demand a full apology from the Minister for her behaviour at the exhibition and her subsequent disgraceful comments, a renewed commitment to the defence of artistic freedom, and a clear statement that there is no block on funding from the ministry for LGBTI related work.

The Innovative Women exhibition, which opened at Constitution Hill in August last year and has since toured both Cape Town and Durban, was a showcase for a group of female artists from across South Africa to display their work. One of these artists was world renowned photographer Zanele Muholi, a multi award winning artist whose photos have for many years created a voice for black lesbian women in South Africa who are all too often both silenced and invisible. Another of the artists featured was Nandipha Mntambo one of the most talented young South African artists of her generation. Minister Xingwana who was due to speak at the opening refused to do so after having viewed the images and according to media reports later chastised officials in her department for having given funding to the exhibition.

RainbowUCT has added its name in endorsing the statement released by African Civil Society:

STATEMENT BY AFRICAN CIVIL SOCIETY

We, the individuals and organisations from African countries, recognise the universality of the human rights of all persons.

We affirm that the right of men and women to have same sex relationships is a fundamental human right.

We are further guided in the knowledge that all forms of discrimination, in particular against vulnerable groups, undermine the human dignity of all in Africa.

We are therefore profoundly disturbed by the nature, content and potential impact of the Anti-Homosexuality Bill (“the Bill”) that was recently tabled in and is currently being considered by the Parliament of Uganda.

We believe that the Bill, if enacted, will cut deeply into the fabric of Ugandan society by–

  • Violating the rights of an already vulnerable and severely stigmatised group of persons by attacking their dignity, privacy and other constitutionally protected rights;
  • Disrupting family and community life by compelling everyone, by the threat of criminal sanction, to report those suspected of engaging in same-sex sexual activity;
  • Seeking to withdraw Uganda from the family of nations by reneging on the country’s international law obligations;
  • Undermining public health interventions such as HIV prevention, treatment, care and support;
  • Promoting prejudice and hate and encouraging harmful and violent action to be taken against those engaging in same sex relations.

We respectfully call on the Parliament of Uganda to reject the Bill in its entirety.

We also call on African governments and the African Union to call on the President and Government of Uganda to withdraw the Bill and to respect the human rights of all in Uganda, without exception.

RainbowUCT cordially invites you to the Faces of IGLYO exhibition and Opening Seminar.

Faces of IGLYO has been exhibited at a the International Conference on LGBT Human Rights in Denmark, at a high school in Norway, a LGBTQ cultural week in Ukraine, at ILGA-Europe’s Annual Conference in Malta as well as in Scotland. After being hosted by RainbowUCT, the exhibition will be featured in the IHLIA (International Gay and Lesbian Archives) in the Netherlands in April and all over Eastern Europe during Pride season.

At the Opening Seminar there will be a short presentation by Ian Ollis, MP and one of the only openly gay politicians in Africa, on “Gay Rights in Africa?!”. Refreshments will be served.

The exhibition will be showing from the 10th until the 22nd March.

RSVP for the Facebook event.

The 2010 Cape Town Pride Festival is scheduled to commence on 26 February and run until 7 March 2010. RainbowUCT encourages you to get involved in the exciting events Pride 2010 has to offer – especially the Full Moon Hike, which RainbowUCT is leading, and the Pride Parade. We hope to have a float of some sort as part of the parade – but we'll send you details about that soon.
 
The annual Cape Town Pride Festival is a celebration of our wonderful diversity, and also creates awareness around issues impacting on the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) communities locally and throughout Africa.

Hey Rainbow'ians

Friday 19 February is the official kick-off to the best year RainbowUCT has ever seen!

The Opening Function starts at 19h00 at the UCT Club, located inside the Sports Centre on Upper Campus. You’ll get a chance to meet the amazing, energetic, and crazy 2010 committee, meet your fellow members, find out more about RainbowUCT, and get up-to-date on all of the exciting events and activities we have planned for this year.

Having trouble trying to figure out what to wear? We’re here to help!

Dear Friends

A big thank you to all those who attended the joint Coalition to End Discrimination (CoED) and Cape Town Pride protest. We had a crowd that transcended class, race, gender, age, and sexual orientation, with a united voice for equality, human rights and for the responsibility of South African society and government to work towards scrapping the Ugandan 'Anti-Homosexuality' bill.

RainbowUCT forms part of the “Coalition to End Discrimination” (CoED). Please join us this Friday, 12 February at 12:00 (RSVP on the Facebook event) as we speak out against the atrocious Ugandan "Anti-Homosexuality Bill" and against our government’s failure to take a firm stand against homophobia in Uganda.
 
If this bill passes in the Ugandan parliament, LGBTI people and their family and friends will live in fear of imprisonment and in fear of the death penalty. Some of the inhumane provisions of the Bill are that if a mother fails to report her son, or a teacher fails to report his student, that teacher or mother faces a prison sentence of up to 7 years. Under the bill, an HIV-positive person who has sexual relations with a person of the same sex would face the death penalty.

Dear members,

Welcome (back) to UCT! Whether you're returning from a refreshing holiday, kicking off your tertiary career at UCT, or visiting us from abroad, we look forward to a productive and fun 2010 with you!

This year, RainbowUCT is coming out (ho ho!) like never before. Our calendar is already filled with many different events throughout the year, ranging from activist and community education initiatives to a diverse array of social events.

Not only will we have a much bigger presence on campus this year, but we're also well on our way towards dominating the web! We have a totally revamped website (www.rainbowuct.org) that's updated almost daily with news on important issues facing our community, and will also feature interviews with social and political figures as well as highlighting the achievements that our own members make every day. Additionally, the website will soon have many different counselling and support resources just for you. Check the events page to stay abreast of all things Rainbow throughout the year. Registered members also have access to the chat room to allow us continued discussions online!