NewsWrap for the week ending September 11, 1999 (As broadcast on This Way Out program #598, distributed 9-13-99) [Written by Cindy Friedman, with thanks to Graham Underhill, Brian Nunes, Jason Lin, Martin Rice, Rex Wockner, Chris Ambidge, Laurie McBride, Andres Duque, Jennifer Richard, Greg Gordon & Lucia Chappelle] Anchored by Josy Catoggio and Greg Gordon In what's being called a watershed in the history of Colombia, a sweeping bill to establish civil rights for gays and lesbians has been introduced in the national Senate. Activists worked closely with Senator Margarita Londono to develop the bill entitled, "By Which the Rights of Gay Women and Men Are Recognized." It would add sexual orientation and gender identity to the list of categories in existing law against bias crimes. It also provides for "liberty of association and congregation between homosexuals." It offers a series of provisions for a partnership contract called a "valid social patrimony agreement," including inheritance rights, social security benefits, and health coverage for partners and partners' children. The proposal also makes provisions for sex reassignment surgery. In addition, it calls for the National Ministry of Education both to remove texts which teach discrimination and to provide "clear and objective information regarding sexual orientation and identity." What's believed to be Mexico's first law prohibiting discrimination against gays and lesbians was enacted by Mexico City's General Assembly last week. Sexual orientation is included in a list of categories in the new human rights law. But some political parties which opposed the bill are seeking a ruling from the national high court to remove the sexual orientation language, and activists have called for letters of support to the President of the General Assembly. It was a legislative grand slam this week as the California state legislature passed all of its lesbigay-related bills before going into recess. Democratic Governor Gray Davis now has a month to sign or veto two civil rights bills, two domestic partner bills, a hate crimes measure, a needle exchange bill, and one to track HIV infections by numerical identifiers instead of names. Davis' Republican predecessors had consistently vetoed all domestic partners and needle exchange proposals, the HIV measure, and a number of prior civil rights bills. But Davis himself dictated most of the terms of the needle exchange measure and one of the domestic partnership bills, so he's expected to sign them. His preferred domestic partners bill, carried by openly lesbian Assemblymember Carole Migden, establishes a statewide registry open only to gays and lesbians and to heterosexuals over the age of 62 -- but it has no tangible benefits except for authorizing hospital visits. It also allows the Public Employees Retirement System to extend health care benefits to domestic partners should any participating California government employer wish to do so. The last and most cherished victory was a bill to protect students from discrimination and harassment based on sexual orientation. This bill had been the primary target of a major opposition campaign by the religious right. Openly lesbian Assemblymember Sheila Kuehl's proposal had failed by a single vote in the Assembly earlier in the session, but was resurrected in a simplified form when less than two weeks remained, and was fast-tracked through the Senate. It reached the Assembly floor as the session was drawing to a close, and when the "yea" vote ensuring passage was counted, the crowd in the chambers erupted in a shout as supporters ran to embrace each other. In Britain, Michael Portillo this week became the first leading member of the Conservative Party to volunteer publicly that he had had "homosexual experiences." It wasn't exactly a coming out, since those experiences were in his college days in the 1970's, and he swore that he had never done any such thing in the years of his public life, remaining faithful to his wife of 17 years. Portillo is viewed as the political heir of Margaret Thatcher and served as Defence Minister under John Major. He was the Member of Parliament for Enfield Southgate for 13 years before being ousted in the 1997 Labour landslide by openly gay Labour newcomer Stephen Twigg. During his political years, Portillo actively supported the ban on military service by gays and lesbians, and actively opposed lowering the age of consent for sex between men to match that for heterosexuals. It's not yet known whether Portillo's own "homosexual experiences" took place before or after he turned 21, the gay age of consent at the time. Portillo still has no regrets about either of those political positions. He made his revelation to the "London Times" public now in an effort to "clear the decks" of the many gay rumors which had long swirled about him, as he prepares to reenter electoral politics. He's one of many now seeking the nomination for the safe Tory Parliamentary seat of Kensington and Chelsea, vacated by the death this past week of Alan Clark. Publicly, the Tories have welcomed back this powerful player and praised his honesty, but there's a very real possibility that the charismatic Portillo could go on to replace the drab William Hague as party leader. The national gay and lesbian lobby group Stonewall welcomed Portillo's announcement, hoping it signals a softening of the Tories' anti-gay campaigning and a future where sexual orientation won't matter at the ballot box. But the direct action group OutRage! and a number of other gays and lesbians charged that Portillo's anti-gay positions had been hypocritical, and were more concerned about the future direction of his politics than his past sexual experiences. South Africa's controversial Gay and Lesbian Alliance Party reported that it's registered more than 65,000 members nationally, and seems to be on track to reach its goal of 100,000 members by January. Two-thirds of its members are between the ages of 17 and 32. Almost 30% are in the Western Cape, with about one-fifth each in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, and the rest fairly equally divided among the other six provinces. The GLA is preparing for upcoming local elections. The new group missed the deadline to register its candidates for this year's national and provincial elections when an electrical fire in the home of party president Juan Uys destroyed most of its records. Malaysia's former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim, now three months into a trial for sodomy, has been rushed to a hospital to be treated for arsenic poisoning. After Anwar had begun to show symptoms, a urine sample was somehow smuggled out of the prison he's been in for the last year, and sent on under a phony name to a lab in Melbourne. That lab found 77 times the usual level of arsenic, and more than four times the levels typical of industrial exposure. Just as Anwar and his supporters claim that all the charges against him of sodomy and corruption represent a plot by Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed, they now believe the arsenic to be an assassination attempt. But Mahathir had suggested a year ago that Anwar had given himself the beating a top police officer later admitted to, and now the attorney general suggested that perhaps a member of Anwar's own family had administered the arsenic in a bid for public sympathy. However, the government has promised a full investigation. Earlier this year, Anwar was sentenced to six years in prison on corruption charges for allegedly interfering in the police investigation of his alleged sexual misconduct. Observers had many concerns about irregularities in that trial, and the deck seems similarly stacked against Anwar in the current trial on sodomy charges, all of which he denies. Nonetheless, he remains a powerful symbol for Malaysia's new reform movement, which hopes to make gains in next year's elections against Mahathir's monolithic ruling UMNO party. There were heavy sentences this week in the U.S. following convictions in widely-reported murders of gay men. In Jacksonville, Florida, Gary Ray Bowles was sentenced to death for a second time after a retrial for the murder of gay Walter Hinton. Bowles slammed a 40-pound rock onto the head of the sleeping Hilton. Bowles has confessed to killing a total of six gay men; he's already received a life sentence for another Florida murder and will be tried for additional murders in Florida, Georgia and Maryland. In Palm Beach County, Florida, Bryan Donahue was sentenced to 50 years in prison and his friend William Dodge to 25 years for the bashing murder of gay Steve Goederis. Goederis had made the mistake of saying, "Hey, beautiful" when passing the then-16-year-old Dodge on the street. But the Human Rights Campaign is launching two new television spots it hopes will combat anti-gay violence. Both feature Judy Shepard, mother of Matthew Shepard, the young gay man who was notoriously bashed to death in Wyoming in October. Shepard talks simply about how she loved her son and what a warm and special man he was. The theme of the campaign is "choose to understand." And finally, the U.S. religious right's highly political, so-called "Truth in Love" media campaign called on gays and lesbians to turn to "ex-gay" ministries to change their orientation. But one leading ex-gay, Anthony Falzarano, charges that not one cent of the 4 million dollars he believes those ads raised ever went to the "ex-gay" movement. Falzarano was summarily dismissed in mid-August from his place on the board of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays, P-FOX, a group he founded; he was also denied entry to the annual conference of Exodus, the international ex-gay network. Now he's claiming that the religious right has been "using" ex-gays instead of supporting them, and that the entire movement may be gone in a year or two. When asked to comment, the Human Rights Campaign's David Smith remarked, "When your enemy is imploding, you don't get in the way."