Serious medical condition: BRAIN SLIPPAGE, when the brain slips down between a person's legs and he she (or gay) is only interested in one thing.
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- Definition of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Description of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Causes and Risk Factors of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Symptoms of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Diagnosis of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Treatment of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Prevention of AIDS and HIV Infection
- Questions To Ask Your Doctor About AIDS and HIV Infection
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Kaposi's sarcoma on the trunk and leg of a person affected with AIDS
(below)
To those who place their anterior body parts in someone's posterior region (or the contrary) for pernicious purposes of doubtful pleasure: THINK AGAIN! IT AIN'T SUCH A GAY TIME AFTERWARDS. It won't be a laughing matter. The last laugh might be on you. For those who put their noses in smelly apertures not designed for same, or their tongues in unwholesome places meant more for exits than entrances, remember, you aint no Dog! (though you act like an animal.) And you might be biting off more than you can chew, sucker. *******************************************************************************
Tzaneen - Three dogs were put down after villagers allegedly caught a 12-year-old girl having sex with one of the animals.
The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) in Tzaneen confirmed that the three dogs were put down last week Tuesday because they'd been beaten so badly by angry villagers.
"We had no alternative because they were in a really bad state," said Tzaneen SPCA chairperson, Ranate Prinsloo.
She said police had asked the SPCA to collect the animals from a village in the Bolobedu area after villagers threatened to kill the dogs themselves to protect their daughters.
Mopani police spokesperson Superintendent Moatshe Ngoepe reported that the incident began as a rumour.
"Villagers heard that the young girl always had sex with three male dogs, so they lay in wait to catch her in the act," he said.
They claim to have seen at least one dog and the girl going behind her family's house on Monday afternoon last week and "surprised" them.
Police were called and arrested the child for bestiality.
She appeared before the Bolobedu magistrate's court last Wednesday and the magistrate ordered that she be sent to a psychologist.
"We are expecting the psychologist's report soon," Ngoepe said.
Head of the Bethesda Christian Church, Dr Elijah Mtileni, believes demons are to blame and said only prayer and fasting would help the girl.
Afraid of getting Aids
Meanwhile, bestiality charges were provisionally withdrawn against a 19-year-old man from Mphakati near Malamulele last Tuesday.
He'd been accused of having sex with a goat.
Two years ago, another Limpopo man was jailed to 18 years for having sex with a goat in October 2002. He'd argued that he abstained from sex with humans because he was afraid of contracting HIV/Aids.
That same year a Bushbuckridge man committed suicide after he was caught having sex with a hen that later died. A young Botswana man who stayed in Limpopo was also accused of having sex with a donkey and littering the ground around it with condoms.
In October 2003, another man was jailed for 10 months after villagers caught him with two goats in Xihosana village near Malamulel. **************************************************************************************Homosexuals deserve to be executed or tortured and possibly both, an Iranian leader told British MPs during a private meeting at a peace conference, The Times has learnt.
Mohsen Yahyavi is the highest-ranked politician to admit that Iran believes in the death penalty for homosexuality after a spate of reports that gay youths were being hanged.
President Ahmadinejad, questioned by students in New York two months ago about the executions, dodged the issue by suggesting that there were no gays in his country.
Britain regularly challenges Iran about its gay hangings, stonings and executions of adulterers and perceived moral criminals, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) papers show.
The latest row involves a woman hanged this June in the town of Gorgan after becoming pregnant by her brother. He was absolved after expressing his remorse. Britain said that this demonstrated the unequal treatment of men and women in law and breached Iran’s pledge to restrict the death penalty to the most serious crimes.
A series of reported executions of gays, including two underage boys whose public hanging was posted on the internet, has alarmed human rights campaigners *************************************************************************************Iran: Death Penalty for Bloggers
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=27759
Iran - 4 July 2008
Alarm over bill that would extend death penalty to online crimes
Reporters Without Borders is alarmed by a draft law that would extend the death penalty to crimes committed online. Passed by parliament on first reading on 2 July, the proposed law would, for example, apply the death penalty to bloggers and website editors who “promote corruption, prostitution or apostasy.”
“This proposal is horrifying,” Reporters Without Borders said. “Iranian Internet users and bloggers already have to cope with very aggressive filtering policies. The passage of such a law, based on ill-defined concepts and giving judges a lot of room for interpretation, would have disastrous consequences for online freedom. We urge the parliament’s members to oppose this bill and instead to starting working on a moratorium on the death penalty.”
The press freedom organisation added: “Death sentences were already passed last year on two journalists - Adnan Hassanpour and Abdolvahed “Hiva” Botimar - after judicial proceedings marked by many irregularities. They have been held for more than a year without any certainty as to what will happen to them, and we urge the authorities to free them at once.”
Submitted by a score of pro-government parliamentarians and consisting of 13 articles with the declared aim of “reinforcing the penalties for crimes against society’s moral security,” the bill was passed on first reading by 180 votes in favour, 29 against and 10 abstentions.
Article 2 of the bill lists the crimes that are already subject to the death penalty, including armed robbery, rape and creating prostitution networks. If the law is adopted, “the creation of blogs and websites promoting corruption, prostitution and apostasy” will also become capital crimes.
According to article 3, judges will be able to decide whether the person found guilty of these crimes is “mohareb” (enemy of God) or “corrupter on earth.” Article 190 of the criminal code stipulates that these crimes are punishable by “hanging” or by “amputation of the right hand and left foot.”
A blogger, Mojtaba Saminejad, was tried before a Tehran court in 2005 on a charge of “insulting the prophets,” which carries the death penalty. In the end, the court acquitted him.
Hassanpour, 28, and Botimar, 30, were sentenced to death on 16 July 2007 by a revolutionary court in the Kurdish city of Marivan on charges of “subversive activities against national security,” spying and “separatist propaganda.” Their convictions were overturned by the supreme court in Tehran on procedural grounds. The Marivan court reimposed the death sentence on Botimar in April of this year, while Hassanpour is awaiting a new trial.
A journalist is also under sentence of death in neighbouring Afghanistan. It is Sayed Perwiz Kambakhsh, 23, of Jahan-e Naw (”The New World) who was arrested on 27 October 2007 in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif and was given the death sentence on 22 January, at the end of a trial held behind closed doors and without any lawyer acting for the defence.
Kambakhsh was arrested after downloading a controversial article from an Iranian website that quoted suras from the Koran about women. He was convicted of blasphemy although it was established that he was not the article’s author.
Iraq: Out of the gathering darkness - GayNZ.com Sent by Iraqi LGBT
Public executions in Mashhad Iran in August 2007. http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/francis/archive/2007/12/22/iran-is-this-why-you-have-no-homosexuality.aspxDNA magazine’s Middle Eastern correspondent Clive Simmons has penned a horrifying account of what LGBT Muslims have to endure in the Middle East and South West Asia. This time, he focuses his attention on the deteriorating situation in Iraq.
In past coverage of this area, I’ve suggested that Moqtadr al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army paramilitary was one of the greatest threats to LGBT safety in Iraq, whose malign influence has led to ‘disappearances,’ mutilations, torture and summary execution of LGBT Iraqis. However, Simmons suggests another pivotal figure in contemporary post-Saddam Iraq has as much influence within contemporary Iraq- Iranian-born Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Despite his strong Iranian ties, the United States has tried to build links with the prominent Shia Muslim religious leader, even if he did seek sanctuary in that neighbouring country when Saddam launched his massive purges and assassinations against independent Shia religious leadership in the eighties and nineties.
Although the United States considers him a peacemaker and reliable ally, al-Sistani is condemned by exiled LGBT Iraqis, who were targeted in one of his fatwas (religious declaration and instruction to the Muslim faithful) shortly after the US-led occupation began in 2004. Ayatollah al-Sistani seems to be pursuing a deliberate programme of ’social cleansing’ through his brutal “Badr Corps”, another Shia Islamic paramilitary militia, centred in Najaf. What is even more damning for the US-led occupation forces is that they’re either looking the other way, or express vitriolic homophobic abuse when challenged about their apparent toleration of such human rights abuses.
Admittedly, it’s a complicated picture. According to Simmons article, Saddam Hussein’s Mukhbharat (secret police) reguarly recruited young gay Iraqi males to serve as spies against foreign gay businessmen or Iraqi business leaders abroad. However, they were also tortured if they did a bad job of it, or refused to comply. Once Saddam was ousted in 2003, things rapidly deteriorated, given that Iraq had no real experience of a pluralistic and secularised diverse civil society with multiple interest groups and political perspectives before that point.
To be honest, al-Sistani’s Badr Corps don’t only target lesbians and gay men, and after overseas pressure, the Ayatollah’s website has removed the anti-gay fatwa statement, although an anti-lesbian declaration still exists. Indeed, as Simmons details, two Iraqi lesbians, Amal and Zahra, were shot dead and decapitated as a result of their courageous concealment of six gay men, and a child that they had rescued from paedophile sex work.
Amal and Zahra were only two members of Iraq’s underground LGBT network of safe houses, which exists across Iraq, and tries to smuggle out LGBT Iraqis to Syria, Turkey and the European Union. In the latter, they can at least claim sanctuary as asylum seekers from their ordeal. There are other horror stories- in Iraq, regular access to AZT is impossible, and one PLWA safehouse occupant can only rely onintermittent supplies from Syria, subject to $400 bribes paid across the border. One would think that Allah the Merciful and Compassionate would weep at this ordeal for someone who is already dealing with a life-threatening medical condition.
Simmons has other horrifying stories to recount. Jobory, another respondent, was tortured and gang-raped by Moqtadr al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia, who have now been integrated into Iraq’s new Interior Ministry security forces and police. In 2006, the United Nations Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) harshly condemned the existence of Shia (and Sunni) domestic terrorism against Iraqi LGBTs. Al-Sadr has established Shia religious kangaroo courts in which young and zealous Shia clerics sentence apprehended LGBT Iraqis to whipping and eventual execution. Altogether, expatriate LGBT Iraqi human rights supporters estimate that at least 425 LGBT Iraqis have perished in the last five years.
Strongly recommended:
Clive Simmons: “The New Dark Age” DNA 101 (June 2008): 96-100.
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