Featured post

Press Release: Release of second edition (digital) of ‘Less than Gay’ – A Citizens’ Report on the status of Homosexuality in India

    The AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan (ABVA) is releasing the second edition of ‘ Less than Gay ’ – A Citizens’ Report on the status of Homo...

Thursday 31 December 2015

An open letter to the Indian Parliamentarians on the repeal of Section 377 Indian Penal Code


As members of AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan (AIDS Anti-Discrimination Movement, ABVA) which has spearheaded the movement on gay issues right from 1988-89 and had brought out the first citizens’ report on the gay issue, Less than Gay in 1991,[1] we appeal to the Indian Parliamentarians to take a quantum jump and stand up for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender (LGBT) rights right inside the Parliament. Ever since the Supreme Court of India re-instated Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) in 2013, few amongst you have dared to take a pro-LGBT stance on the issue. Sonia Gandhi of Indian National Congress (INC) publicly stated:
“I am disappointed that the Supreme Court has reversed a Delhi High Court ruling … the High Court had wisely removed an archaic, repressive and unjust law that infringed on the basic human rights enshrined in our Constitution…I hope Parliament will address this issue and uphold the constitutional guarantee of life and liberty to all citizens of India.” [The Times of India, 13.12.2013]

Rahul Gandhi expressed disappointment with the Supreme Court (SC) verdict on homosexuality:
“These are matters of personal freedom, I would agree with the High Court more on this matter.”[2]

The Communist Party of India (CPI) leader D. Raja asked the NDA Government to initiate the process of bringing suitable amendments to Section 377, IPC which was declared as constitutional by the Supreme Court.[3]

The CPI(M) Election Manifesto, 2014 stated “Amend Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code so that it does not criminalize adult consensual relationships irrespective of sexual orientation.”[4]

The Aam Aadmi Party was:
“…disappointed with the judgment of the Supreme Court upholding the Section 377 of the IPC and reversing the landmark judgment of the Delhi High Court on the subject. The Supreme Court judgment thus criminalizes the personal behavior of consenting adults. All those who are born with or choose a different sexual orientation would thus be placed at the mercy of the police. This not only violates the human rights of such individuals, but goes against the liberal values of our Constitution, and the spirit of our times.
Aam Aadmi Party hopes and expects that the Supreme Court will review this judgment and that the Parliament will also step in to repeal this archaic law.”[5]

Terming the judgement as “disappointment”, TMC MP Derek O’Brien had said, “we are living today in a liberal world and the judgement is disappointing.”[6]

The Supreme Court judgement in Suresh Kumar Koushal & another (11.12.2013) outlined the history of anti-sodomy law in India. The offence of sodomy was introduced in India on 25.07.1828 through the Act for Improving the Administration of Criminal Justice in the East Indies. In 1837, a Draft Penal Code was prepared which included two clauses viz. 361 and 362: “Whoever intending to gratify unnatural lust, touches for that purpose any person or any animal …” with or without consent would be punished with imprisonment. In Note M of the Introductory Report of Lord Macaulay to the Draft Code these clauses were left to his Lordship in Council without comment observing that:
“Clauses 361 and 362 relate to an odious class of offences respecting which it is desirable that as little as possible be said. We leave without comment to the judgment of his Lordship in Council the two Clauses which we have provided for these offences. We are unwilling to insert, either in the text, or in the notes, anything which could have given rise to public discussion on this revolting subject; as we are decidedly of the opinion that the injury which would be done to the morals of the community by such discussion would far more than compensate for any benefits which might be derived from legislative measures framed with the greatest precision.”
[Note M on Offences Against the Body in Penal Code of 1837 – Report of the Indian Law Commission on the Penal Code, October 14, 1837.]

The rulers at that time in 1837-38 desired that as little as possible be said of these offences and wanted to thwart any public discussion on this ‘revolting’ subject. Ironically, in the Report of the Commissioner’s Vol XXVIII it was observed that a most improper ambiguity has been created; the false delicacy created by the ambiguity needed to be censured. The IPC along with Section 377 as it exists today was passed by the Legislative Council and the Governor General assented to it on 06.10.1860.

This ambiguity in the law due to the rulers pretending to be coyish and the absence of public discussion around sexuality has effectively ensured that from 1828 to date i.e. for around two centuries different judges in the courts have interpreted the law differently.

Supreme Court of India in its judgement in Suresh Kumar Koushal by Justices G.S. Singhvi and Sudhanshu Jyoti Mukhopadhaya many cases and concluded that no uniform test could be culled out to classify acts as “carnal intercourse against the order of nature”; hence it was difficult to prepare a list of acts which would be covered by the section.

The British could be excused at least on the ground that they self-confessedly suffer from Victorian values on matters sexual. No such excuses for the Parliamentarians in India – a country which boasts of Kama Sutra (with a full length chapter on gay sex); Khajuraho caves which openly display sculptures in acts constituting “carnal intercourse against the order of nature”. The present day legislators will have to see India not through colonial eyes but with a knowledge of the ancient cultural practices.

While a few legislators have taken a bold stand outside Parliament even recently in 2015, there is no action within the precincts of the Indian Parliament. Arun Jaitley and P. Chidambaram while speaking at the Times Lit Fest in Delhi on 28.11.2015 (The Times of India, 29.11.2015) lamented the stance of the Supreme Court of India in reinstating Section 377, IPC. Shashi Tharoor made it be known through his twitter handle that he was moving a private member’s bill on the issue but he refused to give details of the bill itself. At a time when the Government of India puts up all bills in public domain before moving these in Parliament it would be more democratic if Tharoor’s bill is shared and opinion of all stake holders taken as also of those who are exerted upon the issue for over quarter of a century.

We, at ABVA, had sent an open letter to Sonia Gandhi about two years back for initiating a move for a private member’s bill on the issue.[7] Now that more than seven Members of Parliament (M.P.s) of different parties and also the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has supported the repeal of Section 377, IPC it would be appropriate that these M.P.s move either individually or collectively for a calling attention motion in Lok Sabha/Rajya Sabha where the issue should be discussed thread bare; apprehensions of parties like Samajwadi Party (who are opposed to the move) should be addressed. Also since the LGBT number could be as high as 4% of the population it would not just be sufficient to repeal Section 377, IPC but also to discuss and debate how this section of society has silently suffered principally because the democratic institutions were reluctant to address their concerns.

Generally a calling attention motion could last for up to a few hours and may even get extended up to the next day; the practice is to ensure that representatives of all parties speak. Since legislators belonging to INC, BJP, CPI, CPI(M), AAP,  have already taken a stance, and also if they sign a calling attention motion notice, the Speaker in Lok Sabha and Chairman in Rajya Sabha would have no option but to permit such a debate. Both the nation and the Indian Parliament owe it to the LGBT community all this and much more.

In the Rajya Sabha MPs from various political parties like Derek O’Brien (TMC); D.Raja (CPI); Sitaram Yechury of CPI(M); Arun Jaitley (BJP) and Mani Shankar Aiyar (INC) could file notices with the Chairman, Rajya Sabha for ‘calling attention motion’ urging the house on a matter of urgent public importance. Even in the Lok Sabha elected representatives like Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Shashi Tharoor of INC as also elected representatives of AAP could file notices with the Speaker of the Lok Sabha for a similar debate. Unlike in the years 1828, 1837-38 and 1860 when colonial masters shied away from public discussion and left ambiguities in the law, the present day law makers in the Indian Parliament must ensure that history is not repeated. That practices like fellatio, cunnilingus should be explained, discussed and debated. Finally the law makers should ensure that adult consensual homosexual acts in private are decriminalized. It should be expressly discussed whether lesbianism was ever an offence under Section 377, IPC and if it was then it stands decriminalized. ABVA has always felt that ambiguity in law posed a real threat to the lesbians in India.

More than a year earlier on 22.07.2014 when a question was raised by MP Dharam Vira Gandhi in Parliament whether the Government of India proposed to repeal Section 377, IPC the Minister of State in the Union Ministry of Home Affairs stated that the matter is sub judice. For ready reference reproduced below is the Parliamentary question as well as answer:
Question:
(a)   whether the Government proposes to amend or repeal Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC);
(b)  if so, the details thereof;
(c)  whether the Government proposes to give legal status to the sexual relationship outside the gender binary in a context where the Supreme Court has recognized the third gender and guaranteed them rights under the OBC category including holding discrimination on the basis of sexual identity and gender orientation as unconstitutional ; and
(d)  if so, the details there of?
Answer:
Minister of State in the Ministry of Home Affairs (Shri Kiren Rijiju)
(a) to (d): No Madam. The matter is sub-judiced before the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India. A decision regarding Section 377 of IPC can be taken only after pronouncement of judgment by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India.

The truth of the matter is that the matter is not sub judice as the curative petition pending in the Supreme Court of India for about two years has yet to be heard by a five judge bench to decide on its admissibility!!! Secondly, the 2013 Supreme Court judgement in Suresh Kumar Koushal categorically urged legislators to do their bit. It stated:

“…we would like to make it clear that this Court has merely pronounced on the correctness of the view taken by the Delhi High Court on the constitutionality of Section 377 IPC and found that the said section does not suffer from any constitutional infirmity. Notwithstanding this verdict, the competent legislature shall be free to consider the desirability and propriety of deleting Section 377 IPC from the statute book or amend the same as per the suggestion made by the Attorney General.”

When it suits the legislators the Indian Parliament never shies away from doing a Shahbano on the apex court judgement or passes legislations to specifically overturn orders passed by the apex court. In effect Parliament would be implementing the Supreme Court 2013 judgement by repealing Section 377, IPC.

Both the Supreme Court and Indian Parliament should stop throwing the ball in each other’s court! (no pun intended)

From:
Dr. P.S. Sahni and Shobha Aggarwal
Members, AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan
Email: aidsbhedbhavvirodhiandolan@gmail.com

Thursday 3 December 2015

Women and AIDS


Women and AIDS

The Citizen Bureau
Tuesday, December 01,2015
NEW DELHI: “… The National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) has decided to set up permanent camps at certain locations. The mobile camps are set up four times a month, each screening high-risk individuals such as sex workers, migrants, drug users, truck drivers, men having sex with men and construction labourers. The Govandi slum has some 15,000 migrant labourers, mostly from UP, Bihar and Nepal, who live in matchbox-size rooms.”

– The Sunday Express, 29 November, 2015

and

“There are no bio-medical or physiological factors which make some groups rather than others more prone to HIV infection. Contrary to popular fantasy, the modes of transmission of HIV put many more people at risk than the label “high-risk group” implies. It is not what you are but what you do, and what blood-banks and blood product manufacturers and hospitals do, that constitutes the primary risk factor. It therefore becomes crucial to understand the spread of HIV in terms of activities and not groups which are at high-risk.”

– Extracts from ‘Women & AIDS - Denial and Blame,’ 1990

On the eve of World AIDS Day, December 1, 2015, AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan is releasing the digitized version of its very first report titled “Women & AIDS – Denial and Blame”, twenty-five years after it was first published. The report is as relevant today as it was when the print version was first brought out. The above two quotes bear testimony to this.

In 1988, a group of Delhi-based voluntary workers involved in community work in education, health, law, women’s and gay issues came together over the plight of women working in G.B. Road, Delhi’s red-light area. In 1990 the group released this Citizens’ report. This was probably the first such report in India which documents the discrimination of HIV+ and AIDS patients as also of women in sex work. This group immediately after the release of the report organized itself into AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan (AIDS Anti-Discrimination Movement, ABVA) a non-funded, non-party organization. Till 2013 ABVA had shied away from the digital world because of its penchant for romance of the printed word!

An update is in order. In March 1990, the Delhi Police acquired notoriety when they ‘arrested’ 112 children of women in prostitution on the charge of being ‘neglected juveniles’, simply because their mothers were sex workers. The raid and its aftermath are documented in detail in the report. However, even after the Juvenile Welfare Board pronounced that the children were not neglected, the State went in appeal. The appeal was dismissed in March 1995 with the help of legal assistance provided by Shobha Aggarwal, advocate and member, ABVA.

Efforts to digitize the reports of ABVA have been undertaken as not much has changed in the last 25 years. The discrimination faced by HIV+ persons in India at the hands of the authorities is as rampant today as it was when the report was first brought out. Though not headline-hogging anymore, occasionally reports appear in the print media about such instances. In mid 2015 an instance of a 7 year old HIV+ student was reported; he was asked to leave school for being HIV+ in Bishmpur area of South-24 Parganas District in West Bengal, India. The boy’s maternal grandmother a teacher in the same school was forced to take a HIV test. The boy’s mother too had tested positive in January, 2015 and is now working with an NGO engaged in spreading awareness about HIV. The mother was earlier told by the school authorities that they were planning to set up a different room for the boy where he will sit alone away from others. In November 2015, the boy was allowed entry to the school; he said:

“I have packed my bag and taken out my uniform, my diary, my notebook and all other things are inside. I am so excited because I will meet my friends.”

Hopefully he will not be isolated in the classroom.

This child, his mother and grandmother were discriminated against because 100 odd parents of other school children had petitioned that the HIV+ child be asked to leave the school or they wouldn’t allow their wards to study there. Not just the authorities but the members of the local community harbour unfounded biases against HIV+ persons. No one has been taken to task for this discrimination. In a country where untouchability has a scriptural sanction of more than two millennia, the discrimination is embedded in the minds.

Excerpts from the report “Women & AIDS - Denial and Blame”

FACTS AND MYTHS ABOUT AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) has become a health and human rights crisis of major proportions around the world. As of June this year, 263,051 cases of AIDS have been reported from 156 countries to the WHO, which now estimates that 8-10 million people world-wide may be infected. In India, according to the limited findings of the Indian Council of Medical Research, 2,167 persons have been found infected with HIV, as against 4,61,118 samples of blood belonging to ‘high-risk groups’ screened between October ‘85 (when the screening programme began) and March 31, 1990. 44 AIDS cases have been documented in our country. What is AIDS? AIDS is not a single disease but rather a complex of symptoms caused by infections and/or cancers, primarily due to disruption of the immune system of the body by an under-lying viral infection. AIDS is thought to be caused by a virus called Human Immune-deficiency Virus (HIV) which infects certain types of white blood cells which have important functions in the immune system. HIV Testing HIV tests like the ELISA (Enzyme linked Immuno-sorbant assay) are designed to register the presence of antibodies to the virus rather than the virus itself. Antibodies indicate that the person’s immune system is fighting a foreign body, in this case HIV.

However, antibodies to HIV take an average period of 6 weeks to 3 months and in some cases upto 3 years, to show up in the blood. Tests on recently infected persons can therefore give false negative results. Also, in a small minority of cases antibodies are never produced even though the virus is present in the person’s blood. Further, the ELISA test has a high rate of false positives. For this reason the accepted but not always carried out testing protocol, is a three step process of two ELISA tests followed by a Western Blot assay, a more sensitive but also more costly step. Even this three step protocol is not always accurate and the false positive rate for it may be quite high.

This fact is systematically ignored and leads to unnecessary harassment of citizens. Hundreds of women in prostitution who were illegally detained in welfare homes in Tamil Nadu in May-June ‘90, were Section I AIDS AND THE ESTABLISHMENT 10 found to be HIV positive (HIV+) by the ELISA test. However, even before the confirmatory tests could be done, the authorities doled out press statements that these women were suffering from AIDS. There is a fair chance that many of them would have tested negative with the Western Blot assay

… At the time of printing this report AIIMS still continues to refuse admission to HIV+ persons as the AIDS unit is not functioning. The item “Plight of AIDS patients – Hospitals shut their doors” (IE-8.7.90) states: “Vinit and his brother, haemophilics from birth, got infected by the AIDS causing HIV, either during repeated blood transfusions or during administration of blood products... Vinit was sent away from the Army Base Hospital and was refused admission at the AIIMS even though it has received a special grant from the Health Ministry to create an AIDS unit. 24 At the cost of tax-payers’ the Ministry had also sent several doctors abroad for training in research and treatment of AIDS. Despite this trained manpower, AIIMS unit has not been set up because doctors, technicians and nurses are refusing to care for AIDS patients. Over the last two months Vinit’s blood samples have been returned untested by laboratories, nurses have jeered at him and doctors have asked him to stay away from them.

The complete report can be read at:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5_-fAzc3ezudWFSUHEtMGZtTjg/view

Tuesday 1 December 2015

AN OPEN LETTER TO KIRAN BEDI – HOMOSEXUALITY, PRIVACY RIGHTS AND THE FORTH-COMING DELHI ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

By

Dr. Paramjit Singh Sahni & Shobha Aggarwal

The right wing nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has projected you as the Chief Ministerial candidate in the Delhi Assembly elections scheduled for 7 February, 2015. The lawyers in all the subordinate courts of Delhi have opposed your candidature reminding the electorate about the brutal lathi charge in 1988 leashed upon them under your stewardship while you were the Deputy Commissioner of Police (North). One of the injured lawyers is presently functioning as a judge of the Delhi High Court; he was given eight stitches for the injuries sustained during the lathi charge. Subsequently a Judicial Commission of Inquiry headed by Justice D.P. Wadhwa indicted you. All this is fresh in public mind. What needs to be highlighted is your homophobic views aired publicly while you were the Inspector General of Prisons (Tihar, Delhi).

Your prejudices effectively ensured that the Jail inmates were denied access to condoms. Media reports at that time indicated that you consider homosexuality to be “abnormal” and would like to take all steps to give the inmates “a chance to be normal”. You had opined, then, that you would not hesitate to step up surveillance to “ensure” that inmates do not indulge in homosexual activity. Moreover you saw “no need” to amend Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). To recapitulate what you said:

“I am still not reconciled to except homosexuality as a normal human practice. We need to undertake a massive education programme among the inmates so that I could at least give them a chance to be normal. The first step would be preventive, through an education programme. If that doesn’t work, the next step would be to increase surveillance.
“If that too fails, I would go in for increased counselling. Only after that would I consider anything else.”

You also said that supplying condoms “would amount to encouraging people to indulge in homosexuality. It would be like legalizing drugs.”

Constitutional lawyers at that time had dubbed your assertions about surveillance to be preposterous; and that it would be the death of liberty of prisoners.

It will be a bit too late as well as embarrassing for you to say that you have been misquoted, as the above quotes are from The Pioneer dated 21.02.1994 and the reporting is by Amit Prakash. The Pioneer’s editor is a Rajya Sabha member courtesy BJP; the paper is pro-BJP.

You would recall that members of AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan (ABVA) had an official meeting with your good-self in 1994 within the precincts of Tihar Jail and had given you a copy of “Less Than Gay”, a Citizens’ Report on the Status of Homosexuality in India, brought out by ABVA in November-December, 1991. This report was the first such document published in India. ABVA had requested you to go through the report and shed your prejudices against homosexuality and come to terms with the fact that a percentage of people (males and females) have a different sexual orientation which is both normal and natural; these are the gay and lesbian people. Homosexuality is innate; you are born with it. Access to condoms will not make a heterosexual person to ‘become’ a homosexual person.

Ms. Bedi, when you were planning to increase surveillance of inmates at Tihar Jail did you realize that you would be subverting the fundamental rights enshrined in the Indian Constitution available to all citizens of India including those inside the jail? Article 21 of the Constitution of India guarantees the right to life and personal liberty. The Right to Privacy is an essential part of the Right to Life as enunciated in several Supreme Court judgements.

We wish to refresh your memory that in 1994 ABVA had filed a Civil Writ Petition no. 1784/1994 titled AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan v. Union of India & others wherein you as Inspector General of Prisons (Tihar, Delhi) were respondent number 4. The petition prayed interalia:

“(a) to declare that section 377 of the Indian Penal Code 1908 is unconstitutional and void –
as being hit by the provisions of Articles 13, 14 and 21 and 25 of the Constitution of India. …
           (d)  to restrain the respondents from segregating or isolating prisoners with a certain sexual orientation or those suffering from AIDS or from commencing prosecution against those prisoners who are suspected to have participated in consensual anal intercourse.”

To refresh your memory we reproduce relevant points from the counter affidavit filed by you in the said writ petition in September, 1994:

“… there is no justification and legality for supply of condoms in the prison. Supply of condoms will promote homosexuality.”

Outlining the steps taken to discourage homosexuality in jail the affidavit elaborated that senior level check at night is being taken; as also an Open Panchayat system which allows free interaction on development in the prison; and mobile petition box system to encourage anonymous information of all kinds of incidence of behavior.

Your affidavit betrays your ignorance on and prejudices about homosexuality as also your intention to undertake surveillance on the private lives of prisoners.

Ms. Bedi, do you still hold the same views on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) issues after a lapse of more than two decades?

For your ready reference we may point out that a large section of civil society appears to be in favour of decriminalizing consensual homosexual acts. Amongst the political parties and their allied groups, the Bharatiya Janata Party, Vishva Hindu Parishad, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh perceive gay sex to be unnatural. The Left parties and Aam Aadmi Party are in favour of decriminalizing homosexuality. Both Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi of Indian National Congress have publicly supported the removal of Section 377, IPC – an archaic, repressive and unjust law that infringes on the basic human rights enshrined in our Constitution; Sonia Gandhi hopes that Parliament will address this issue and uphold the constitutional guarantee of life and liberty to all citizens of India.

Lastly the LGBT community is not a miniscule minority. No authentic census has been conducted in India on the exact number but the number is likely to be close to 4% of the population, if one were to go by the studies done by Alfred Kinsey, an American scientist in the last century. There is no known reason to believe otherwise. This constitutes a sizeable number of potential voters for any party. Reports indicate that President Obama got re-elected courtesy a swing of this section of voters towards the Democratic Party in the U.S.A.

[Dr. Paramjit Singh Sahni is one of the founder members of ABVA; Shobha Aggarwal is an advocate and the ABVA’s writ petition was filed through her.]

P.S. This open letter was also published in SACW and Countercurrents.org. The links are:
1. http://www.sacw.net/article10476.html

2. http://www.countercurrents.org/sahni300115.htm 

(The above open letter was shared with AAP on 01.02.2015.)

On 02.02.2015 AAP wrote:


Aam Aadmi Party

Feb 2 (8 days ago)
to me

Dear Dr. Paramji Singh Sahni Ji & Shobha Aggarwal Ji

Greetings

We thank you for sharing this. We shall forward the same to our team internally for them to go through the article. Kindly support us in all possible way for the upcoming election in Delhi.

Warm Regards
Sundar Rajan

Team AAP



On 10.02.2015

Kiran Bedi as BJP's CM candidate stands CONDOM-ned!