2012年5月21日星期一

【China AIDS:7301】 The Council for Global Equality Releases NGO Guide on Accessing U.S. Embassies

From: Henry Pacheco [mailto:henry@globalequality.org]
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2012 12:55 PM
To: sogi-list@arc-international.net <sogi-list@arc-international.net>
Subject: [sogi] The Council for Global Equality Releases NGO Guide on Accessing U.S. Embassies
 

In Recognition of the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO):

Council Releases NGO Guide to Human Rights 

Washington, DC � May 17, 2012 � The Council released a new NGO guide, Accessing U.S. Embassies: A Guide for LGBT Human Rights Defenders, to mark the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO).  The guide is available in English, French and Spanish on the Council's website at www.GlobalEquality.org.

The guide highlights the various diplomatic tools that U.S. embassies use to advance a range of human rights and development objectives, from diplomatic "démarches," to support for LGBT refugees to the drafting of the annual human rights report that is required of every U.S. embassy.  It also looks at various opportunities that exist for U.S. embassies to support, both technically and financially, LGBT advocates in host countries. 

The guide recognizes that U.S. embassies around the world have traditionally reached out to civil society organizations and local human rights defenders to support a broad human rights agenda.  Until recently, however, U.S. embassies rarely included LGBT civil society organizations or defenders in their outreach.  That has now changed, and U.S. embassies are reaching out to local LGBT groups to learn more about the human rights abuses that LGBT communities experience, and to explore opportunities to partner with civil society to address those abuses.    

The guide points out that U.S. embassy support for the human rights and human dignity of LGBT communities reflects, in part, America's attempt to promote fundamental freedoms of speech, assembly and expression.  As such, the guide helps human rights defenders in other countries ground their requests in language that relates back to freedoms rooted in America's Constitution, and that enjoy strong bipartisan support even amid other debates in Washington. 

While focusing on the needs of one particularly invisible and at-risk group of human rights defenders, the Council also uses the guide to paint a broad justification for the inclusion of LGBT groups in U.S. human rights policy.   When U.S. embassies use the diplomatic, economic and political tools that are available to them to promote the rights and social inclusion of marginalized communities, including LGBT individuals, they stand firmly for human rights, but they also help foster tolerant, democratic and diverse societies that make better diplomatic allies and stronger economic partners over the longer term.     

___________________

The Council for Global Equality is a Washington-based advocacy NGO that encourages a clearer and stronger American voice on international human rights concerns. The Council focuses on the opportunities and impacts of U.S. foreign policy for LGBT communities abroad. As American human rights advocates, the Council works to ensure that those who represent the United States―in the U.S. Congress, in the White House, in U.S. embassies and in U.S. corporations―use the leverage available to them to oppose human rights abuses that are too often directed at individuals because of their sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression.  

 

Henry Pacheco

Council Coordinator

The Council for Global Equality
ph: 202.719.0511
cell: 415.335.1756
www.globalequality.org
Global Equality Today blog
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