In recognition of Pride month, the UN Independent Expert on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (IE SOGI), Mr. Victor Madrigal-Borloz, will be launching new guidelines for states to ensure a COVID-19 response free from violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
US Supreme Court ruling ‘extremely positive’ for LGBT community, says UN Rights Expert
Remembering human rights activist Yves Yomb
Yves Yomb’s journey to becoming an activist began in his home country, in 2006. At the height of a media campaign targeting gay men and other men who have sex with men, Mr Yomb was a founding member of Alternative Cameroun, one of the first human rights organizations in western and central Africa to advocate for tolerance and social inclusion. “We told ourselves that if we didn’t act, no one would,” he once said.
UNAIDS: Six concrete measures to support women and girls in all their diversity in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic
UNAIDS: Black Lives Matter
"I salute the courage of everyone around the world who has stood up to insist that #BlackLivesMatter," says Winnie Byanyima in this message to UNAIDS staff.
UN experts condemn modern-day racial terror lynchings in US and call for systemic reform and justice
A group of independent UN rights experts today called on the United States Government to take decisive action to address systemic racism and racial bias in the country’s criminal justice system by launching independent investigations and ensuring accountability in all cases of excessive use of force by police. They also issued a statement regarding the nationwide protests against racial injustice.
OHCHR: Statement on the Protests against Systemic Racism in the United States
OHCHR: Threshold test on hate speech now available in 32 languages
Guyana: Mobilizing COVID-19 relief for transgender sex workers in Guyana and Suriname
Twinkle Paule, a transgender activist, migrated from Guyana to the United States of America two years ago. As the COVID-19 crisis deepened, she thought of her “sisters” back home and in neighbouring Suriname. For many of them, sex work is the only option for survival. She knew that the curfew would starve them of an income. And she was worried that some might wind up in trouble with the law if they felt forced to work at night.