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Journalist Says Nicaraguan Police Supported Her Attacker

Journalist Says Nicaraguan Police “Supported” Her Attacker Marisol Balladares, radio host on Radio Corporación, denounced a man who tried to “stab” her twice and stole her cell phone. 8 abril, 2021 Nervous and with a visible wound on her left hand, journalist Marisol Balladares denounced before the Permanent Commission on Human Rights (CPDH), an attack she suffered on Wednesday, March 31. A man allegedly linked to the Police, stole her mobile phone and tried to wound her with a knife. Balladares explained that while leaving Radio Corporación, where she works as a broadcaster, she overheard Police officers, who besiege the media outlet, speaking on the radio: “the target is moving south,” exactly the direction she had taken to board a vehicle that would take her home.

Bay Area Reporter :: Out in the World: Caribbean LGBTQ rights are at a pivotal moment, advocates say

LGBTQ Caribbean activists decades-long challenges against countries to gain equality are lining up in multiple courts, creating a potential tidal wave ushering in queer rights for the region. At least 11 legal challenges are in various stages of the judicial process, with some cases facing high courts in a make-or-break moment for the Caribbean s LGBTQ movement. Next week, the Privy Council in the United Kingdom is expected to release rulings for two of the region s most anticipated cases addressing same-sex marriage in Bermuda and the Cayman Islands. The Jamaican Supreme Court s March 8 hearing on same-sex marriage was postponed, said gay Jamaican activist and attorney Maurice Tomlinson. A new date has not been set. Tomlinson s decriminalization case against Jamaica s government has been heard once at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, in November 2019. The commission has been quiet since then.

Bay Area Reporter :: New global LGBTQ group forms on anniversary of 1st same-sex weddings

Two decades ago, four same-sex couples said, I do, in Amsterdam s city hall. It was the beginning of the marriage equality movement as the Netherlands became the first country in the world to usher in same-sex marriage April 1, 2001. Since then, more than 18,000 same-sex marriages have been performed in the country. Today, same-sex marriage is legal in 30 countries around the world, according to Freedom to Marry Global, a new group that launched to mark the occasion. Its predecessor, Freedom to Marry, shut down in early 2016 following the U.S. Supreme Court s 2015 Obergefell decision that legalized same-sex marriage nationally. The freedom to marry has brought joy, security, inclusion, and dignity to loving and committed couples and millions of families. At the same time, the marriage conversation has also been an engine of transformation helping open hearts and minds and propelling further advances for the human rights, acceptance, and love of gay and transgender people, Ev

Bay Area Reporter :: Out in the World: Caribbean LGBTQ rights are at a pivotal moment, advocates say

Bay Area Reporter :: Out in the World: Caribbean LGBTQ rights are at a pivotal moment, advocates say
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