Dal mondo (continua)
NEPAL

Rapporti omosessuali decriminalizzati
BBC, 21 dic 07
Nepal court rules on gay rights
Nepal's sexual minorities have long complained of discrimination
Nepal's Supreme Court has ordered the government to scrap laws that
discriminate against homosexuals.
The court ordered that sexual minorities should be guaranteed the same rights as
other citizens.
Campaigners said the ruling was a "huge victory". Homosexuality is frowned upon
in conservative South Asia.
Nepalese laws do not explicitly criminalise homosexuality, but an "unnatural sex
act" currently carries a prison term of up to a year.
Human rights campaigners say the provision has been used to justify arrests of
men who have sex with men and transgender people.
'Encouraging'
Gay men and women and members of other sexual minorities have long complained of
discrimination in Nepal.
In their ruling, two Supreme Court judges said: "The government of Nepal should
formulate new laws and amend existing laws in order to safeguard the rights of
these people.
"Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual and intersex are natural persons
irrespective of their masculine and feminine gender and they have the right to
exercise their rights and live an independent life in society."
Activists said it was a landmark ruling.
"It's a very encouraging and progressive decision. We all feel we are liberated
today," Sunil Babu Pant, the president of the Blue Diamond Society which
campaigns for Nepal's sexual minorities, told the AFP news agency.
"There were no specific laws to protect the rights of sexual minorities but the
Supreme Court's decision has opened the doors to enjoy our rights."
Mr Pant said education, citizenship papers and jobs could now be given to people
without them having to identify themselves as male or female, or giving their
gender as "third sex".
There was no immediate response from the government to Friday's ruling.
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Codice penale, art. 16
Parte n. 4
Chi commette o causa qualsiasi modo innaturale per un rapporto sessuale, come
previsto in altri articoli del presente capitolo, deve essere punito con una
reclusione fino a un anno o a un'ammenda di 5.000 rupie.
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Ansa, 1 mag 08
Nepal: un omosessuale in Parlamento
Il Partito Comunista, garantirą diritti delle minoranze
(ANSA) - KATMANDU, 1 MAG - Un nepalese che ha pubblicamente dichiarato la
propria omosessualitą entrerą per la prima volta nella storia del Paese in
Parlamento. Lo ha detto il suo partito, il Partito comunista, secondo il quale
Suni Bubu Pant e' stato scelto come candidato 'per assicurare i diritti degli
omosessuali e di altre minoranze''. Farą parte dunque dell'assemblea costituente
eletta il 10 aprile e largamente dominata dai ribelli maoisti e 'sarą la prima
persona a rappresentare la comunitą gay del Nepal'.