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IGLHRC Announces 2008 Felipa de Souza Award
Winners
Date:
March 4, 2008
For Immediate Release
Contact: Hossein Alizadeh, IGLHRC Communications Coordinator,
212-430-6016
Sarah Tobias, IGLHRC
Communications and Research Manager, 212-430-6034
(New
York, NY, March 4, 2008) - The
International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) announced
today that it would award its 2008 Felipa de Souza Award to two
outstanding nominees—the Iranian Queer Organization (IRQO) and Chilean
trans activist Andrés Ignacio Rivera Duarte. IGLHRC’s Felipa Award
recognizes the courage and effectiveness of groups or leaders dedicated to
improving the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender,
intersex (LGBTI) and other individuals stigmatized and abused because of
their sexuality or HIV status. Each award winner will receive a $5,000
stipend. The awards will be presented at a special ceremony in New York on
April 28, 2008.
“We are so honored this
year to be able present this award to two extraordinarily powerful voices
for LGBTI human rights,” said Paula Ettelbrick, IGLHRC’s executive
director. “IRQO provides absolutely vital assistance for lesbian and gay
Iranians fleeing the threat of death in their home country, literally
helping to save and rebuild countless lives and Andrés Rivera has been an
enormously courageous pioneer for the rights of trans people in Chile. It
is truly our pleasure to honor all that these remarkable activists have
done to promote human rights and dignity for LGBTI people.”
In
2005, Andrés Ignacio Rivera Duarte, a trans man, founded Organización de
Transexuales por la Dignidad de la Diversidad, the first NGO in Chile
dedicated to fighting for trans people’s rights, which he currently heads.
He has worked with government and the local health system to facilitate
the evaluation, treatment and surgery of trans people, and organized the
first Rancagua debate on the Civil Union Pact. But his work is not just
with high-level officials; he also provides direct support to sex
workers—visiting them nightly to distribute coffee, food and information
about HIV/AIDS. Himself the victim of employment discrimination, he fought
a landmark lawsuit, bringing issues of gender identity into the public
view, finally winning the right for trans people to legally change their
name and sex in 2007.
Founded in 2001 as the Rainbow Group, and known as the Persian Gay and
Lesbian Organization until 2006, IRQO serves as the representative of
thousands of Iranian queers, giving visibility to a population the Iranian
government is aggressively trying to silence. Based in Toronto, Canada,
with members working out of Europe and Iran, IRQO has played a key role in
documenting LGBT rights violations in Iran and in mobilizing public
opinion to pressure Iranian authorities to end the inhumane treatment of
sexual minorities. The organization also helps gay and lesbian refugees
around the world to fight deportation orders that would return them to
Iran—where they could face torture or the death penalty—and helps them
obtain asylum in friendly countries. IRQO strives to increase the
self-esteem of Iranian queers by offering phone counseling inside Iran and
raising awareness of homosexuality in the Persian-speaking media.

“We are thrilled that the
international community has come to acknowledge the LGBT rights struggle
in Iran,” said Arsham Parsi,
IRQO’s executive director. “We can no longer claim that no one cares about
our plight. This is not an award just for IRQO. We accept this award on
behalf of all Iranian queers who have been long fighting for their basic
human rights. The stipend will allow IRQO to continue its campaign for
human rights and to challenge homophobia in Iran.”
“I receive this award with humility and honor,” said Andrés Rivera. “On
behalf of murdered trans people, of those who fight to build a more
egalitarian and fair world, and of those trans people who day-by-day live
with the pain of not being considered human beings.”
Nominations for the Felipa Award are solicited each year from activists
around the world. Nominees go through a rigorous review by the staff,
board and the International Advisory Committee of IGLHRC. The award
embodies the spirit of Felipa de Souza, who endured persecution and
brutality after proudly declaring her intimacy with a woman during a 16th
Century inquisition trial in Brazil.
Previous Felipa Award winners include: the Blue Diamond Society (BDS) of
Nepal; Rauda Morcos, founder of ASWAT (Voices) the first group for
Palestinian lesbians; Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ), the first
organization to push for the human rights of LGBT people in Zimbabwean
society and to provide counseling services and HIV/AIDS prevention
campaigns; Simon Tseko Nikoli, the famed LGBT/HIV activist from South
Africa; Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays, whose leader
Brian Williamson was murdered in 2004; Lohana Berkins, a globally
recognized transgender activist from Argentina; and Maher Sabry, the
Egyptian activist who notified IGLHRC of the arrests of the Cairo 52, a
group of 52 men who were arrested by the Egyptian police at a Cairo gay
nightclub in 2001.
For more information regarding IGLHRC’s Felipa de Souza Award and its
A Celebration of Courage
events, visit:
www.iglhrc.org
http://www.iglhrc.org/site/iglhrc/section.php?id=5&detail=835
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