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South Africa’s Pride Flag Debuts in New York on First Day of Gay Weddings

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

South African Pride FlagWhen the designer of the South African Gay Flag announced “Joburg (Johannesburg) pride will be a sea of little Gay flags of South Africa. It will mean that the design will finally be a flying across all provinces of South Africa’s national pink community, uniting us all,” little did he know that activists from GAY USA would ensure the flag’s presence in the hallways of the New York City’s Clerk offices, as hundreds of gay and lesbian couples lined up to marry on the historic first day of same-sex marriages in the State of New York.

The Gay Flag of South Africa (GFSA) was launched at the Mother City Queer Project has gained massive momentum in the past six months.

Full Story from Gay USA

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South Africa: Cape Town Radio Station Hosting Gay Wedding Contest

Friday, February 4th, 2011

Marriage EqualityGetting struck by Cupid’s arrow may very well take your breath away this Valentine’s Day if you are gay, live in Cape Town and listen to Heart104.9FM. The station renowned for representing the richness and diversity of the Mother City will soon reveal the first five contestants in the Two Guys and a Wedding competition.

This is the ultimate opportunity for two guys who are looking for true love and partnership to meet their soul mate live on air and celebrate the big day with an all expenses paid fantasy wedding and honeymoon.

The eight-week journey of love and romance will unfold live on Phat Joe’s daily breakfast show (06:00 to 09:00). Potential grooms for the first five contestants will be interviewed live on air next week by a panel of highly regarded experts. Heart104.9FM listeners will share in all of this excitement as well as the much anticipated wedding proposal and build up to the wedding day.

Full Story from Media Update

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South Africa: Gay Zimbabwean Radio Host Plans Wedding

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

Former Amakorokoza star Frank Malaba, well known as Dr Phumza by followers of the series might be a man President Robert Mugabe will never like to listen to talking. Following a public revelation that he was gay, the South African actor-cum-radio personality opens up about marriage, his childhood as a gay student and his views on gay rights in an exclusive interview with NewsDay.

Malaba became the first Zimbabwean to declare that he loves other men. Asked how his life has been after he opened up: “My life has been changed around for the better and I get inbox messages from young and old alike saying they respect my standing and who I am. I get young Zimbabweans, South Africans and on occasion Tanzanians and Kenyans asking for advice.

“On one occasion I got a message from a Zimbabwean man who has been married out of fear of being persecuted by family and friends for his sexual orientation.”

Full Story from Newsday.co.zw

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South Africa: Gay Couple in Iconic Photo Separated by Tragedy

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

Gay Kiss

Two young men electrified a conservative South African town when a picture of them kissing prompted anger–mostly from area males–but also spoke to gays of passion, commitment… and normalcy. The photo, capturing a moment in time, is immortal–but a month after it was taken, one of the young men is dead, and the other in critical condition, following a car crash.

The photograph of Bjorn Czepan and Mark Dean Brown kissing was taken by Vanessa Smeets at a Stellenbosch University event called Kiss in the Avenue. Gay and lesbian couples participated in the event this year; the photo of Czepan and Brown made the front page of the school paper, Die Matie.

The two young men were students at another school, Cape Town University, but they nonetheless became instant “symbols for tolerance and gay rights at the predominantly Afrikaner [university],” reported British newspaper The Guardian on Sept. 9.

Full Story from Edge Boston

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South Africa: President Rebukes Malawi Over Jailing of Gay Couple

Friday, May 28th, 2010

South African President Jacob Zuma, in a rare rebuke of another African nation, on Thursday condemned a Malawi court’s sentencing of a gay couple to 14 years in jail. The two men were jailed last week for sodomy and indecency, a decision that human-rights groups condemned and the U.S. called “unconscionable.”

The case has highlighted discrimination against homosexuals in Africa. Kenyan police in February halted a gay wedding and arrested several suspected homosexuals.

“We have condemned the action taken to arrest people, in terms of our constitution,” Zuma said, in response to questions in parliament.

Full Story from The Province

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Being Lesbian in South Africa: The Chosen Few

Friday, May 7th, 2010

DOWN the road from a Constitutional Court that is charged with upholding gay rights, South Africa’s only lesbian soccer team fight not just for the ball but to overturn brutal prejudice and discrimination.

The “Chosen Few” play with skill and huge enthusiasm despite the scrappy dirt wasteground, bordered by a large puddle, on which they are obliged to train, a few hundred metres from the imposing Constitutional Court in central Johannesburg. “We tried many other places,” said Lerato Marumolwa, one of the best players, pointing ruefully at a well-kept green pitch 500 metres away. “But they just won’t let us in.”

Such frustration is minor compared to the so-called “corrective” rape, murder, insults and beatings that South African lesbians have frequently suffered, despite the widely admired, post-apartheid Constitution which was the first in the world to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Full Story from the Dispatch Online

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South African Group to Protest Anti Gay Discrimination in US, Uganda

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

A protest march will take place in Pretoria on Freedom Day, April 27, to demand equality for lesbians and gays in both the U.S. and Uganda. Organized by Up & Out, the University of Pretoria’s gay organization, the protesters will march from the Ugandan Embassy to the U.S. Embassy.

The U.S. has been slammed by the organization for its continued refusal to grant same-sex couples federal marriage rights and benefits. “How can a supposed first world nation decide to do such things?” asked Up & Out in a statement.

Uganda is also under immense international pressure over its proposed Anti Homosexuality Bill which, if passed by the country’s parliament, would impose the death penalty on people found guilty of repeated “homosexual offenses”.

Full Story from Lez Get Real

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Holy War Against Gays in Africa

Monday, March 29th, 2010

In Uganda, there is a burning desire to send them to the gallows. Woe betide those who dare “marry” in Malawi. In Zimbabwe, President Mugabe and Premier Tsvangirai have surprisingly agreed to refuse to consider their rights in the new constitution, with the former describing them as “pigs” and “dogs”. In 38 of the 53 countries on the continent, homosexuals are treated like criminals.

Same-sex marriage has been legal in South African since 2006. But it is an exception. South Africa has become a whole new universe of tolerance, severed from a continent where homosexuality, often violently punished, is considered as an unnatural act, an abomination. According to AIDES, an NGO that fights against the spread of HIV/AIDS, of out of 53 African countries, 38 of them criminalize sexual relations between persons of the same sex. Penalties range from six months to 14 years imprisonment, depending on the country.

In Sudan, where the Islamic law (Sharia) in force calls for the execution of people who engage in same sex relations, no one has yet been killed by the law for homosexual act. But Frederic Moreau, General Secretary of another NGO, Ensemble Contre La Peine de Mort (Together Against Death Penalty), begs to differ: “In Sudan, even if there is no execution, it is extremely dangerous for the sharia to be involved (in this issue), because countries that apply those laws, whereby homosexuals are executed, can one day be cited as a pretext to condemn and execute.”

Full Story from Afrik.com

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Desmond Tutu Speaks Out for Gays in Africa

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Hate has no place in the house of God. No one should be excluded from our love, our compassion or our concern because of race or gender, faith or ethnicity — or because of their sexual orientation. Nor should anyone be excluded from health care on any of these grounds. In my country of South Africa, we struggled for years against the evil system of apartheid that divided human beings, children of the same God, by racial classification and then denied many of them fundamental human rights. We knew this was wrong. Thankfully, the world supported us in our struggle for freedom and dignity.

It is time to stand up against another wrong.

Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people are part of so many families. They are part of the human family. They are part of God’s family. And of course they are part of the African family. But a wave of hate is spreading across my beloved continent. People are again being denied their fundamental rights and freedoms. Men have been falsely charged and imprisoned in Senegal, and health services for these men and their community have suffered. In Malawi, men have been jailed and humiliated for expressing their partnerships with other men. Just this month, mobs in Mtwapa Township, Kenya, attacked men they suspected of being gay. Kenyan religious leaders, I am ashamed to say, threatened an HIV clinic there for providing counseling services to all members of that community, because the clerics wanted gay men excluded.

Full Story from the Washington Post

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