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We call on individuals and organisations to endorse this letter by signing on to this petition.

The letter below to the President of Uganda was drafted after a meeting of individuals and organisations campaigning against hate-crimes. The Uganda Bill is both homophobic and AIDS-phobic.

Protest the appointment of Jon Qwelane as South Africa's ambassador to Uganda now. Call Department of International Relations in Tshwane (+27 12 351 1000) and Cape Town (+27 21 464 3700).

The Joint Working Group1 (JWG), a network Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) organizations throughout South Africa are deeply disturbed by reports over the weekend reportedly confirmed by the Department of International Relations and Cooperation that Jon Qwelane is to be appointed as an ambassador. We are even more disturbed by suggestions that he may be sent to Uganda where a brutally homophobic piece of legislation is being debated at this time.

Jon Qwelane has shown himself on a number of occasions to be openly and unapologetically homophobic and transphobic, not least when he wrote the article “Call me names, but Gay is not ok” in which he among other things expressed support for Robert Mugabe’s brutal and oppressive treatment of LGBTI people in Zimbabwe. There remains an open investigation and pending charges against Qwelane for hate speech at the South African Human Rights Commission in connection with this article.

Given that the South African Constitution in the Bill of Rights clearly states that people may not be discriminated against on the basis of their sexual orientation it seems unbelievable that a person who clearly holds views contrary to those stated in the Constitution would be considered a suitable representative of the state in any role, anywhere in the world.

The UNISA Centre for Applied Psychology (UCAP) and Gay Umbrella, a community based Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) organisation, is currently busy with a research project in the North-West Province titled: Empowerment of Emerging South African LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) Communities: The North-West Province as Case Study. The project aims to determine  the societal position of men and women engaging in same-sex sexual activities in emerging South African LGBT communities (such as the North-West Province)  and to identify which possibilities are present to empower them.

The research team is urgently looking for more people to participate in this project. A questionnaire has been designed for completion online at www.mambaonline.com. Although the questionnaire is quite extensive and takes about an hour to complete, it is hoped that the information will help us determine the needs of LGBT people. All respondents are anonymous and all information is treated as highly confidential. We would like to invite all LGBT people currently living in the North-West Province to complete a questionnaire as soon as possible.

We are pleased and extremely proud to announce that our very own Vice-Chairperson, Catherine Pretorius, and girlfriend Kirsty Noonan, were recently named as Cape Town Lesbians’ January 2010 Couple of the Month! Congratulations to Catherine and Kirsty!

URGENT CALL TO ACTION

CALL FOR THE IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL OF ARTICLE 217 OF THE DRAFT REVISION OF THE RWANDA PENAL CODE ACT WHICH CRIMINALIZES HOMOSEXUALITY

Horizon Community Association (HOCA), an LGBTI organization in Rwanda, in collaboration with the Coalition of African Lesbians (CAL) and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) calls on all human rights defenders, organizations, governments, civil society, globally, to immediately take action against a proposed article in the draft Penal Code Act in Rwanda which would criminalize homosexuality.

Photo by Roberto MilanPhoto by Roberto Milan

CAPE TOWN – Along with other student, special interest, and human rights organisations, RainbowUCT is leading the formation of a new coalition against hate crimes of all kinds, and recently protested a recent Swiss legislation that discriminates against Swiss Muslims.

The protest was held on 10 December 2009 at the Consulate General of Switzerland on Long Street, and coincided with the observation of International Human Rights Day.

As part of the protest, we hand delivered a letter to the Office of the Ambassador which strongly condemned a recent Swiss legislation that prohibits any new construction of minarets atop Islamic mosques in Switzerland.

Health4Men is a non-profit organisation rendering free sexual health services to men, with an emphasis on targeting men at higher risk of HIV infection. Such men include gay-identifying men and other men who have sex with other men, male commercial sex workers and male intravenous drug users. A project of Anova Health Institute and sponsored by American donors USAID / PEPFAR, Health4Men works in partnership with the Western Cape Department of Health.
Services are provided through the Health4Men office in Greenpoint, and the project’s clinic based in Woodstock, the Ivan Toms Centre for Men’s Health.

RainbowUCT has launched a new website!

Our fabulous, brand-new website will be updated regularly with events, upcoming initiatives, features on students and community leaders, news, and resources. You are welcome to sign up for our newsletter!

The site also allows visitor feedback using the Chat features. This is the perfect place to discuss issues that are important to you, and a great place to keep the discussion going long after meetings are over. Resources, support and campaign information will also be available in the Archive and Action sections.

It's official, the theme for the Rainbow UCT Year-End Function is: Trailer Trash Bash!

The party will be happening at the Tennis Club on Friday the 23rd October from 8pm - 1am.

We'll send out more reminders closer to the time, but remember - the more plastic hair and blue eyeshadow you have on, and the longer your nails, the better you look. For the more butch among us, start growing that mullet out and collect stains on your wife-beater vests...

The National Interfaith Leadership Council, formed by Rhema church leader Ray McCauley and closely associated with President Jacob Zuma, flew its conservative colours this week, saying that it wants to revisit laws legalising abortion and same-sex marriages.

Last week the council (NILC) entered the debate about the ­Judicial Service Commission’s decision to drop its investigation into Western Cape Judge President John ­Hlophe. It attacked the challenge to the JSC by Freedom Under Law, chaired by former Constitutional Court judge Johann Kriegler, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s support for it, saying it could “only serve to further erode the integrity of the judiciary and undermine the confidence of the people in it”.