2015-01-13 10:11
New Delhi – The United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon has accused
India of fomenting intolerance with its ban on gay sex amid uproar over a
ruling party minister's plans to make homosexuals "normal".
Speaking
on a visit to the capital New Delhi, Ban said he "staunchly opposed the
criminalisation of homosexuality" referring to India's colonial-era law
that prohibits gay sex.
"I am proud to stand for the equality of
all people - including those who are lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender," the UN secretary general said in a statement late Monday.
"I
speak out because laws criminalising consensual, adult same-sex
relationships violate basic rights to privacy and to freedom from
discrimination. Even if they are not enforced, these laws breed
intolerance."
India's Supreme Court reimposed a ban on gay sex in
late 2013, ruling that the responsibility for changing the 1861 law
rested with lawmakers and not judges.
Violation of rights
Gay
sex had been effectively legalised in 2009 when the Delhi High Court
ruled that banning "carnal intercourse against the order of nature" was a
violation of fundamental rights.
Ban's comments came on the same
day that a state minister from Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
ruling party announced his plans to make gays "normal" in the coastal
resort state of Goa.
Ramesh
Tawadkar, sports and youth affairs minister in Goa's state government,
told reporters that he planned to open up centres on the lines of
Alcoholics Anonymous to treat them.
"We will make them normal. We
will have centres for them, like Alcoholic Anonymous centres," Tawadkar
said, adding that the state would "train them and give them medicines
too".
Widespread and ridicule
Tawadkar, a
member of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), made the comments after
releasing the state's policy on youth issues which listed lesbians,
gays, bisexuals and transgenders as a stigmatised group that needed
attention.
His comments drew widespread criticism and ridicule
from gay rights groups and social media with jeering remarks posted on
Twitter.
"There has to be someone from the higher authorities...
from the BJP who will have to speak up on this because when you are
silent about someone making such an irresponsible statement you are
actually admitting it," Harish Iyer, a gay rights activist, told NDTV
news channel.
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