By C.L. Frederick
Internationally known LGBTQ columnist, actor, male model, and HIV awareness activist.
05/31/2017
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Transgender rights are near nonexistent in the United States. The Russian government openly supports the persecution of LGBT individuals and imprisons detractors. Chechnya is full force LGBT genocide and concentration camps. Needless to say, around the globe, homophobia and hate continue to severely affect the LGBT community. So what’s next? Why do we sit idle and watch? There is still hope for the tide to turn in favor of the American transgender community, but the same cannot be said for LGBT people in Chechnya. The situation is code red and signifies a terrifying reality that could impact the criminalization of being LGBT around the world.
Chechnya
is an eastern European country that has a degree of, but not complete,
self-government. The country is under Russia’s heavy influence and it
can be inferred that Russia is the common denominator in most of the
nation’s social problems. Chechnya imposes the death penalty for
homosexuality and there are no securities for LGBT citizens. The
government encourages the killing of people suspected of homosexuality
by their families. Not only does the Chechen government sanction the
endorsement of families murdering their own LGBT relatives, including
children, there are zero repercussions for these acts.
In
February of 2017, the Chechen government reportedly launched its “gay
purge.” The first concentration camps for homosexuals since World War II
have been opened in Chechnya. LGBT individuals are routinely rounded up
and detained in these facilities where they have been tortured and
murdered. Recently, international attention was focused on the genocide
in Chechnya when video surfaced of a teenage boy being thrown off the
roof of an apartment building. The teenager’s family suspected him of
being a homosexual and in retribution for bringing shame to his family
they murdered him. The heartbreaking video sent shockwaves around the
world and confirmed the horrors that the Chechen LGBT community are up
against.
The
situation in Chechnya is an unwelcome return to paragraph 175 under
Nazi Germany. Paragraph 175 added homosexuality to the criminal code.
LGBT individuals were forced to wear pink triangles and imprisoned in
concentration camps across Nazis controlled Europe. Only 40 percent of
“pink triangle prisoners” survived their captivity. The horrors of
concentration camps have now returned to Europe, but solely targeting
LGBT individuals. This in itself is a frightening gateway that could
lead to the reinforcement of LGBT persecution around the world.
The
future is uncertain for LGBT in Chechnya and the world has been slow to
respond. Hope is beginning to emerge as the United Nations has issued
condemnations against the human rights violations occurring in Chechnya.
Europe and the U.S. State Department have urged Russia to investigate
these crimes against humanity, but little has changed and there remain
to be any sanctions placed on Chechnya for their crimes. To complicate
matters, the Russian government and President Vladimir Putin are
staunchly anti—LGBT, supporting laws discriminating against homosexuals.
Russia vehemently arrests LGBT activists who protest against the
actions in Chechnya. President Trump and his administrations close ties
to Putin only add to the problem.
Solidarity amongst the global LGBT community is needed now more than ever. Diminishing LGBT rights in the U.S. under the Trump administration is a concern that must not be ignored. Our lesbian, gay, and bisexual communities have failed to fight hard enough for our transgender community. We have seen their rights be slowly stripped away, yet few voices have actively demanded that our lawmakers do not ignore the plight of our transgender allies. How can our community fight for those in Chechnya and ensure that our hard fought rights will not be infringed upon if we aren’t fighting tooth and nail for transgender rights as well. We are truly a global community and no longer can afford to be complacent when any LGBT at home or abroad are vulnerable. When voices demand action openly and keep educated on the broader community is when change occurs. It is the only way to protect our communities. The realization that any LGBT communities worldwide can so easily have their rights infringed upon and lives ended so inhumanely should terrify every soul. Speak up, speak out, and realize what happens to one LGBT community affects us all.
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C.L. Frederick is an internationally published columnist, reporting on social issues affecting the LGBT community. His articles have been published by numerous national and international publications. A few of the outlets he has written for include The Phoenix Newsletter (Kansas City), DNA Magazine, Prism Magazine, Homoculture, Impulse Group, The Dallas Voice, and The Windy City Times (Chicago). As a writer, he is known for sharing his personal experiences dealing with being a HIV positive gay man and for documenting his journey from addict to being in recovery. He has had several featured acting roles on t.v. shows such as; Modern Family, Chicago Fire, Chicago P.D., Chicago Med, LA Hair, and Empire. As a male model, he has been featured in campaigns for Joe's Jeans, Quarter Homme, and Andrew Christian. He is single in his personal life, but has his Dimaggio. His greatest dream in life is to have a family and he will build that 'white picket fence' with his own two well manicured hands if he has to.
Read more articles from C.L. Frederick in the Huffington Post, here.
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