Chennai Pride Success + Homosexuality Decriminalized…

Chennai Pride 2009: I'm the one in the middle, wearing a pink shirt and brandishing a rainbow flag. All around me are people from the lgbtqka and ally communities whom I know and love.
Hey Folks,
I wish I could write more, but I’m at an Internet cafe in Dharamsala (Himalayas) that’s closing soon, and since I won’t have much Internet access until the end of July because I’ll be traveling/trekking in the Himalayas, I wanted to at least say a couple words about how Chennai Pride went and about some recent developments in India’s queer rights movement.
1) Chennai Pride was AMAZING, POWERFUL, INSPIRATIONAL…a HUGE SUCCESS. Well over 300 people marched – lgbtqka folks as well as family, friends, and colleagues. There were tons of onlookers watching on the sidelines the entire length of the march. The media came en masse – loads of TV news crews and print journalists. A few folks and I had the role of leading call-and-response chanting in Tamil and English. I definitely lost my voice by the end of the march, and by the time I got home, I had felt like I had just run a marathon, having put my entire body into the march – jumping wildly, dancing, vocalizing with my brothers and sisters with all our might. When the march ended, we were all hugging and cheering in ecstasy. It had happened. And it was a f*ckin’ incredible success. History had been made. And we all looked FABULOUS doing so
. The next day, Chennai’s Pride March was featured on the front page of many newspapers – including all the major ones – and was all over the news on TV. The Chennai lgbtqka community has made its mark. The community is filled with confidence and strength to pursue the work that lay ahead of us over the coming years.
I will elaborate on the march and post pictures, links to news articles, and footage from the march when I have more time at a computer. (Yours truly was apparently quoted and pictured in print and on TV…i haven’t seen either since I left for the Himalayas the morning after the march, but I’m sure I sounded completely inarticulate in the midst of my marching fervor
)
2) FOUR DAYS AFTER THE MARCHES, ON JULY 2, THE DELHI HIGH COURT DELIVERED ITS JUDGMENT, DECRIMINALIZING HOMOSEXUALITY!!!! We have faith that the rest of India will follow in DHC’s lead. Congratulations and infinite gratitude to Voices Against 377, Alternative Law Forum, Naz Foundation, and the many others who fought so hard over the years against Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code to bring about this historic ruling. People all over the country are celebrating. Below are excerpts from the judgment that a member of the community sent to us. I’ll post the full judgment later.
1) Excerpts:
The criminalisation of homosexuality condemns in perpetuity a sizable section of society and forces them to live their lives in the shadow of harassment, exploitation, humiliation, cruel and degrading treatment at the hands of the law enforcement machinery. The Government of India estimates the MSM number at around 25 lacs. The number of lesbians and transgenders is said to be several lacs as well. This vast majority (borrowing the language of the South African Constitutional Court) is denied “moral full citizenship”. Section 377 IPC grossly violates their right to privacy and liberty embodied in Article 21 insofar as it criminalises consensual sexual acts between adults in private. These fundamental rights had their roots deep in the struggle for independence and, as pointed out by Granville Austin in “The Indian Constitution – Cornerstone of A Nation”, “they were included in the Constitution in the hope and expectation that one day the tree of true
liberty would bloom in India”.
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Section 377 IPC targets the homosexual community as a class and is motivated by an animus towards this vulnerable class of people.
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The criminalisation of private sexual relations between consenting adults absent any evidence of serious harm deems the provision’s objective both arbitrary and unreasonable. The state interest “must be legitimate and relevant” for the legislation to be non-arbitrary and must be proportionate towards achieving the state interest. If the objective is irrational, unjust and unfair, necessarily classification will have to be held as unreasonable. The nature of the provision of Section 377 IPC and its purpose is to criminalise private conduct of consenting adults which causes no harm to anyone else. It has no other purpose than to criminalise conduct which fails to conform with the moral or religious views of a section of society. The discrimination severely affects the rights and interests of homosexuals and deeply impairs their dignity.
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Section 377 IPC has the effect of viewing all gay men as criminals. When everything associated with homosexuality is treated as bent, queer, repugnant, the whole gay and lesbian community is marked with deviance and perversity. They are subject to extensive prejudice because what they are or what they are perceived to be, not because of what they do. The result is that a significant group of the population is, because of its sexual non-conformity, persecuted, marginalised and turned in on itself.
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The inevitable conclusion is that the discrimination caused to MSM and gay community is unfair and unreasonable and, therefore, in breach of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.
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We hold that sexual orientation is a ground analogous to sex and that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is not permitted by Article 15.
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The impugned provision in Section 377 IPC criminalises the acts of sexual minorities particularly men who have sex with men and gay men. It disproportionately impacts them solely on the basis of their sexual orientation. The provision runs counter to the constitutional values and the notion of human dignity which is considered to be the cornerstone of our Constitution. Section 377 IPC in its application to sexual acts of consenting adults in privacy discriminates a section of people solely on the ground of their sexual orientation which is analogous to prohibited ground of sex. A provision of law branding one section of people as criminal based wholly on the State’s moral disapproval of that class goes counter to the equality guaranteed under Articles 14 and 15 under any standard of review.
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(Rex note: Oh, look! California Attorney General Jerry Brown’s argument…)
In the present case, the two constitutional rights relied upon i.e. ‘right to personal liberty’ and ‘right to equality’ are fundamental human rights which belong to individuals simply by virtue of their humanity, independent of any utilitarian consideration. A Bill of Rights does not ‘confer’ fundamental human rights. It confirms their existence and accords them protection.
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CONCLUSION
129. The notion of equality in the Indian Constitution flows from the ‘Objective Resolution’ moved by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru on December 13, 1946. Nehru, in his speech, moving this Resolution wished that the House should consider the Resolution not in a spirit of narrow legal wording, but rather look at the spirit behind that Resolution. He said, ‘Words are magic things often enough, but even the magic of words sometimes cannot convey the magic of the human spirit and of a Nation’s passion…….. (The Resolution) seeks very feebly to tell the world of what we have thought or dreamt of so long, and what we now hope to achieve in the near future.’ [Constituent Assembly Debates: Lok Sabha Secretariat, New Delhi: 1999, Vol. I, pages 57-65].
130. If there is one constitutional tenet that can be said to be underlying theme of the Indian Constitution, it is that of ‘inclusiveness’. This Court believes that Indian Constitution reflects this value deeply ingrained in Indian society, nurtured over several generations. The inclusiveness that Indian society traditionally displayed, literally in every aspect of life, is manifest in recognising a role in society for everyone. Those perceived by the majority as “deviants” or ‘different’ are not on that score excluded or ostracised.
131. Where society can display inclusiveness and understanding, such persons can be assured of a life of dignity and non- discrimination. This was the ’spirit behind the Resolution’ of which Nehru spoke so passionately. In our view, Indian Constitutional law does not permit the statutory criminal law to be held captive by the popular misconceptions of who the LGBTs are. It cannot be forgotten that discrimination is anti- thesis of equality and that it is the recognition of equality which will foster the dignity of every individual.
132. We declare that Section 377 IPC, insofar it criminalises consensual sexual acts of adults in private, is violative of Articles 21, 14 and 15 of the Constitution. The provisions of Section 377 IPC will continue to govern non-consensual penile non-vaginal sex and penile non-vaginal sex involving minors. By ‘adult’ we mean everyone who is 18 years of age and above. A person below 18 would be presumed not to be able to consent to a sexual act. This clarification will hold till, of course, Parliament chooses to amend the law to effectuate the recommendation of the Law Commission of India in its 172nd Report which we believe removes a great deal of confusion. Secondly, we clarify that our judgment will not result in the re-opening of criminal cases involving Section 377 IPC that have already attained finality. We allow the writ petition in the above terms.
CHIEF JUSTICE and S.MURALIDHAR, J
JULY 2, 2009











Nice work Prev. This is an amazing achievement, and I’m proud to know you helped make it happen.
Enjoy the trekking. Beware of leechee.
I’m so PROUD of you and all the fabulous work you’re doing. Keep it up! and be safe and have fun traveling with namesake out in the derrtty North! Say hi to His Holiness for me.
WOW. only you could have such a profound impact in such a relatively short time. love and congratulations …