• Refugee LGBTI+s: ’I’m Afraid the Pandemic will End but Discrimination will Continue’ -Bianet English
    Refugee LGBTI+s’ already big problems have grown even more with the new coronavirus outbreak as many have lost their jobs and are facing to lose their homes as well, according to a new report by the HEVİ LGBTI+ Association.

    #Covid-19#Turquie#LGBTI#Discrimination#Minorité#Répréssion#Politique#migrant#migration

    https://bianet.org/english/migration/224619-refugee-lgbti-s-i-m-afraid-the-pandemic-will-end-but-discrimination-w

  • Automated moderation tool from Google rates People of Color and gays as “toxic”
    https://algorithmwatch.org/en/story/automated-moderation-perspective-bias

    A systematic review of Google’s Perspective, a tool for automated content moderation, reveals that some adjectives are considered more toxic than others. “As a Black woman, I agree with the previous comment.” This phrase has a 32% probability of being “toxic”, according to Google’s Perspective service. For the phrase “As a French man, I agree with the previous comment” the probability is only 3%. Perspective was launched in 2017 in an attempt to fight online harassment. Built by Jigsaw, a Google (...)

    #Google #Facebook #algorithme #bot #racisme #modération #sexisme #discrimination #LGBT (...)

    ##AlgorithmWatch

  • À Malte, le double langage sur l’avortement - Amnesty International France
    https://www.amnesty.fr/droits-sexuels/actualites/lavortement-reste-criminalise-dans-cet-archipel-avance

    Pourtant, depuis la victoire des travaillistes aux élections générales de 2013, plusieurs lois progressistes ont été votées. En 2014, l’union civile pour tous ouvre l’adoption aux homosexuels. L’année suivante, un texte autorise l’autodétermination de genre et la création d’un genre X. En 2016, Malte devient le seul État européen à criminaliser les thérapies « de conversion » ou de « guérison » pour les gays. Et, depuis juillet, le mariage pour tous est possible.

    À la différence de nombreux autres pays européens, à Malte, ces dernières années, il n’y a pas eu une seule voix au Parlement s’élevant contre les droits LGBT

    Silvian Agius, directeur des droits de l’homme et intégration au ministère du dialogue social et des libertés civiles.

    Outre Drachma, des groupes d’intérêts LGBT se sont formés dans les années 2000 pour faire valoir efficacement leurs droits. « C’est un petit pays et tu as un bon accès aux politiciens. Si tu veux un rendez-vous, tu envoies un mail et tu l’obtiens dans la plupart des cas, commente Gabi Calleja, coordinatrice du Malta gay rights movement, association de référence. On a presque obtenu tous les droits ». La procréation médicalement assistée (PMA) pour les couples lesbiens et les femmes célibataires n’est cependant pas légale, tout comme la gestation pour autrui (GPA).

    Cette cohabitation entre esprit gay-friendly et mentalités patriarcales en matière de droits des femmes à disposer de leur corps semble paradoxale. Elle se comprend en partie par la place accordée à l’enfant. Mais aussi, comme le rappelle Silvian Agius, parce que « les associations de femmes n’ont jamais réclamé l’avortement comme un droit des femmes. Pour elles, c’est un crime ».

    Donc le pays où l’#avortement est interdit sans aucune exception (même pas tu as 11 ans, tu as été violée, au mieux on te propose de te prématurer le bébé pour qu’il soit en bonne santé toute sa vie) gagne haut la main le concours du pays le plus #LGBT friendly d’Europe (et du monde).

    Country Ranking | Rainbow Europe
    https://rainbow-europe.org/country-ranking

    The colour assigned to each country gives you an indication of where the countries are positioned on a scale between 0% (gross violations of human rights, discrimination) and 100% (respect of human rights, full equality).

  • Asia’s first LGBTQ streaming platform launches globally | GLAAD
    https://www.glaad.org/blog/asias-first-lgbtq-streaming-platform-launches-globally

    Asia’s first streaming platform catering to the LGBTQ+ community, GagaOOLala, is now launching globally. Originally founded in 2016, the service expanded from Taiwan to other Asian territories during the past years. It is now available worldwide featuring a rare catalogue of Asian LGBTQ+ content from countries such as Japan, South Korea, Thailand and its native Taiwan.

    Portico Media, the company behind GagaOOLala, was one of the co-founders of the Taiwan International Queer Film Festival, once the bigger queer film festival in Asia, but after three editions they realized it was not enough: “There was a lack of LGBTQ+ content available all year round in Taiwan and the rest of Asia. A physical film festival happening during a few days was not the solution, we needed something 24/7. The situation in many Asian countries is still dire, in some of them homosexuality is still considered a crime. We needed to provide easier access to LGBTQ+ stories to let them know they are not alone,” explained Jay Lin, Portico’s CEO.

    https://www.gagaoolala.com/en/home
    #cinéma #LGBT #Asie #ressources

  • Laetitia Avia, la députée LREM qui horrifie ses assistants
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/120520/laetitia-avia-la-deputee-lrem-qui-horrifie-ses-assistants?onglet=full

    Alors que Laetitia Avia présente mercredi 13 mai en dernière lecture à l’Assemblée nationale sa proposition de loi de lutte contre la haine sur Internet, cinq ex-assistants parlementaires de la députée LREM dénoncent, preuves à l’appui, des humiliations à répétition au travail, ainsi que des propos à connotation sexiste, homophobe et raciste. L’élue « conteste ces allégations mensongères ». Laetitia Avia doit concrétiser mercredi à l’Assemblée un combat mené de longue date : le vote final de sa loi contre la (...)

    #racisme #domination #législation #sexisme #harcèlement #LGBT #travail

  • Ban biometric mass surveillance !
    https://edri.org/blog-ban-biometric-mass-surveillance

    Across Europe, highly intrusive and rights-violating facial recognition and biometric processing technologies are quietly becoming ubiquitous in our public spaces. As the European Commission consults the public on what to do, EDRi calls on the Commission and EU Member States to ensure that such technologies are comprehensively banned in both law and practice. Keep walking. Nothing to see here…. By the end of 2019, at least 15 European countries had experimented with invasive biometric mass (...)

    #CCTV #biométrie #racisme #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #BigData #COVID-19 #discrimination #Islam #LGBT (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##santé ##surveillance ##EuropeanDigitalRights-EDRi

  • Coronavirus : la Corée du Sud recourt aux données des opérateurs pour retrouver les clients de boîtes de nuit
    https://www.bfmtv.com/tech/coronavirus-la-coree-du-sud-recourt-aux-donnees-des-operateurs-pour-retrouver

    Une dizaine de milliers de personnes ayant visité un quartier de Séoul connu pour ses boîtes de nuit ont reçu un SMS du gouvernement coréen. Tous ont été invités à se faire dépister le plus rapidement possible, dans la crainte d’une contamination au SRAS-CoV-2. Pour endiguer l’épidémie de coronavirus, la Corée du Sud cible les oiseaux de nuit. Le gouvernement coréen a fait appel aux trois principaux opérateurs télécom du pays pour retrouver les personnes s’étant rendues dans le quartier d’Itaewon, à Séoul, (...)

    #smartphone #GPS #géolocalisation #FAI #métadonnées #BigData #COVID-19 #LGBT #santé (...)

    ##santé ##surveillance

  • Deep neural networks are more accurate than humans at detecting sexual orientation from facial images.
    https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fpspa0000098

    We show that faces contain much more information about sexual orientation than can be perceived or interpreted by the human brain. We used deep neural networks to extract features from 35,326 facial images. These features were entered into a logistic regression aimed at classifying sexual orientation. Given a single facial image, a classifier could correctly distinguish between gay and heterosexual men in 81% of cases, and in 71% of cases for women. Human judges achieved much lower accuracy (...)

    #algorithme #manipulation #technologisme #LGBT #biométrie

  • Lebanon’s LGBT People Reclaim Their Power
    https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/05/07/lebanons-lgbt-people-reclaim-their-power

    Videos, Report Highlight Coexistence, Solidarity, New Possibility for Rights (Beirut) – Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people and their rights in Lebanon are part and parcel of the nationwide protests that began on October 17, 2019, Human Rights Watch said today in a web feature. The web feature, “‘If Not Now, When ?’ Queer and Trans People Reclaim Their Power in Lebanon’s Revolution,” shares stories of hope and solidarity told by queer women and transgender people who are (...)

    #censure #LGBT #surveillance #HumanRightsWatch

  • Au Maroc, on fait la chasse aux homos sur internet en plein confinement | Slate.fr
    http://www.slate.fr/story/190038/maroc-denonciation-homos-outing-harcelement-internet

    Les gays du Royaume sont devenus la cible d’une campagne massive d’outings et les cas de harcèlement se multiplient. « N’importe qui peut insulter un gay désormais. C’est comme si elle avait donné le feu vert qu’ils attendaient tous. » Ismaël* a à peine 18 ans. Depuis le lundi 13 avril, il est devenu encore plus difficile pour lui d’assumer son orientation sexuelle. Il fait partie de ces dizaines d’homos marocain·es dont les données personnelles et le nom, parfois accompagné d’un numéro de téléphone ou (...)

    #Grindr #smartphone #géolocalisation #discrimination #harcèlement #LGBT

  • #Homothérapies, #conversion_forcée

    Électrochocs, lobotomies frontales, « thérapies » hormonales… : dans les années 1970, aux États-Unis, la #dépsychiatrisation de l’homosexualité met progressivement fin à ces pratiques médicales inhumaines, tout en donnant naissance à des mouvements religieux qui prétendent « guérir » ce qu’elles considèrent comme un péché, une déviance inacceptable. Depuis, les plus actives de ces associations – les évangéliques d’Exodus ou les catholiques de Courage – ont essaimé sur tous les continents, à travers une logique de franchises. Bénéficiant d’une confortable notoriété aux États-Unis ou dans l’ultracatholique Pologne, ces réseaux œuvrent en toute discrétion en France et en Allemagne. Mais si les méthodes diffèrent, l’objectif reste identique : convertir les personnes homosexuelles à l’hétérosexualité ou, à défaut, les pousser à la continence. Comme Deb, fille d’évangélistes de l’Arkansas ouvertement homophobes, Jean-Michel Dunand, aujourd’hui animateur d’une communauté œcuménique homosensible et transgenre, a subi de traumatisantes séances d’exorcisme. De son côté, la Polonaise Ewa a été ballottée de messes de guérison en consultations chez un sexologue adepte des décharges électriques. Rongés par la honte et la culpabilité, tous ont souffert de séquelles psychiques graves : haine de soi, alcoolisme, dépression, tentation du suicide…

    Étayée par le travail de deux jeunes journalistes, dont l’un s’est infiltré dans des mouvements français – des rencontres façon Alcooliques anonymes de Courage aux séminaires estivaux de Torrents de vie, avec transes collectives au menu –, cette enquête sur les « thérapies de conversion » donne la parole à des victimes de cinq pays. Leurs témoignages, à la fois rares et bouleversants, mettent en lumière les conséquences dévastatrices de pratiques qui s’apparentent à des dérives sectaires. « Nous avons affaire à une espèce de psychothérapie sauvage qui peut amener à la destruction de la personnalité », affirme ainsi Serge Blisko, ancien président de la #Miviludes (Mission interministérielle de vigilance et de lutte contre les dérives sectaires). En mars 2018, le Parlement européen a voté une résolution appelant les États membres à interdire ces prétendues thérapies. Jusqu’à maintenant, seul Malte a légiféré sur le sujet.


    https://boutique.arte.tv/detail/homotherapies_conversion_forcee
    #film #film_documentaire #documentaire
    #homophobie #LGBT #thérapie #église #Eglise #douleur #souffrance #rejet #choix #déviance #guérison #sexualité #genre #Exodus #thérapies_de_conversion #fondamentalisme_chrétien #maladie #Eglise_catholique #Eglise_évangélique #catholicisme #Les_Béatitudes #douleur #confession #communion_Béthanie #lobotomie #déviance #éradication #foi #Alan_Chambers #Desert_Streams #Living_Waters #Richard_Cohen #Alfie's_home #Journey_into_manhood #virilité #Brothers_Road #courage #Wüstenstrom #Günter_Baum #Torrents_de_vie #Andrew_Comiskey #masculinité #communauté_de_l'Emmanuel #David_et_Jonathan #homosexualité_transitionnelle #homosexualité_structurelle #homosexualité_accoutumance #pornographie #méthode_aversive #médecine #Bible #pêché #Père_Marek_Dziewiecki #compassion #culpabilité #haine #culpabilité_douce #violence #mépris #continence #résistance_à_la_tentation #tentation #responsabilité #vulnérabilité #instrumentalisation #exorcisme #démon #Gero_Winkelmann #violence_familiale #manipulation #secte #dérive_sectaire #dépression #business #honte #peur #suicide #justice #Darlen_Bogle

  • The Making of a YouTube Radical - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/08/technology/youtube-radical.html?campaign_id=158&emc=edit_ot_20200420&instance_id=17796

    Caleb Cain was a college dropout looking for direction. He turned to YouTube. Soon, he was pulled into a far-right universe, watching thousands of videos filled with conspiracy theories, misogyny and racism. “I was brainwashed.” Martinsburg, W.Va. — Caleb Cain pulled a Glock pistol from his waistband, took out the magazine and casually tossed both onto the kitchen counter. “I bought it the day after I got death threats,” he said. The threats, Mr. Cain explained, came from right-wing trolls (...)

    #YouTube #pornographie #manipulation #Google #algorithme #LGBT #extrême-droite #addiction #sexisme (...)

    ##racisme

  • Les leçons du virus - Mediapart
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/culture-idees/110420/les-lecons-du-virus

    Face aux épidémies, quelles sont les vies que nous voulons sauver ? Covid-19, sida, syphilis : chaque société peut se définir par les pathologies virales qui la menacent et la façon dont elle s’organise face à elles. Premier volet d’un texte du philosophe Paul B. Preciado, dans notre série consacrée au monde d’après la pandémie. Si Michel Foucault avait survécu au sida en 1984 et était resté en vie jusqu’à l’invention de la trithérapie, il aurait peut-être aujourd’hui 93 ans : aurait-il accepté de (...)

    #biopolitique #COVID-19 #surveillance #santé #profiling #LGBT #discrimination #violence #sexisme #domination #racisme (...)

    ##santé ##migration

  • Struggles of women on the move*

    –------

    Introduction

    When the crowd gathered for the Women’s Day demonstration on March 8, 2020 at 10am in front of Cinema Riff at Grand Socco in Tangier, Moroccan feminists, Sub-Saharan women for freedom of movement, single mothers, and a few Europeans came together. The women of our local Alarm Phone team, all from Sub-Saharan Africa, would sit together afterwards with some of their friends from Europe and start to write down their experiences for this report.


    At the same time, on the Greek island of Lesvos women from Alarm Phone teams interviewed women in and around the hot-spot of Moria, who spoke out about the suffering they had gone through on the most Eastern flight route towards Europe. They reported how on 30 January a crowd started moving from the overcrowded hot-spot Moria towards the city of Mytilene, which is still on Lesvos. „All women against Moria“, „Women in solidarity“, „Moria is a women’s hell“ and „Stop all violence against women“ was written on some of the many signs while the crowd chanted „Azadi“ (farsi: freedom) with raised fists.

    Shortly afterwards an Alarm Phone activist met with a young woman from Somalia, who had made the crossing from Libya to Italy last September and who wants to encourage the rescue groups to continue their amazing work.

    Another woman sat down and wrote a beautiful solidarity letter to one of the women active in Search and Rescue: “When I hear her voice on the phone, saying ‘my boat will head to the target with full speed,’ I picture her behind the wheel of this massive boat carrying 400 people, flying above the sea as if it was weightless.”

    There are some who write in a brave way about the suffering women had to go through: The pain they feel and the suffering that the simple fact of having to pee means for women in Moria. Or the struggles with the Boumla (Wolof for police) deporting them within Morocco towards the deserts, exposing them to greater dangers. Or the death of a young Moroccon student.

    There are others who decided not to remember the suffering in detail, but to point out their strategies, their struggles and the thankfulness about the solidarity created among us.

    In this report we tried to write about the manifold experiences of women and LGBTQII+, who cross the sea to reach a place of safety or who are stuck in transit, and about the experiences of women active in Search and Rescue who are trying to support these struggles. Women are on the move for their own freedom of movement in all three regions of the sea: in the East between Turkey and Greece in the Aegean, in the Central Mediterranean from Libya and Tunisia towards Italy and Malta, and in the West from Morocco towards Spain. Everywhere we meet more women in the frontlines of these struggles than we used to in the past. In the East, the percentage of adult men among those arriving even fell below 50 percent after 2015, which creates a completely different situation. While all of them face intersecting forms of visible and invisible violence making border crossing even more dangerous and lethal for women, we know that women on the move are more than what they are reduced to, and that they bear a power and a strength that no border is able to defeat.

    Also, more and more women are active in the Search and Rescue initiatives as well as in our Alarm Phone team. In the Alarm Phone we are even a majority. We decided to write in a very subjective way and what we ended up with is a patch-work of different stories in various styles and tones. We hope that this report empowers others to raise their voices as well and to become more visible with all their great expertise.

    We dedicate this report to all women and LGBTQI+ who are struggling for their survival in the refugee camps all around the world in times of the Coronavirus under life-threatening conditions. The only option to end this suffering is freedom of movement as a basic global right for all. We will continue this struggle.

    In March 2018, the Alarm Phone published the last report that was dedicated to the specific situation of women at sea.

    From now on, we will try to publish a report every year about the special situation of women and LGBTQI+ on the move.
    Daily struggles of women on the move in the Western Mediterranean. Alarm Phone activists report
    March 8, 2020 in Tangier

    The Women’s Day demonstration gather on March 8, 2020 at 10am in front of Cinema Riff at Grand Socco in Tangier. Moroccan feminists, Sub-Saharan women for freedom of movement, single mothers, and a few Europeans come together. A Samba group is drumming, there is a lively exchange between the different groups, purple-coloured cloths – the symbolic colour of March 8 – are handed out, banners are rolled out, contacts are exchanged – the atmosphere is great. About 800 women come together. This makes an impression in the northern Moroccan metropolis, because the voices are loud and determined with slogans like ‘Solidarité avec les femmes du monde entier!’ ‘Raise your voice, seize your rights’ in Arabic and French starts the demonstration and runs along the big boulevard to the Place de Nación. Passers-by and journalists follow with interest. One thing is already clear at this early hour: the march is empowering, and this in a place that has been marked by the worst police repression for several months.

    Julia and Pauline* participated during this march with the women’s group of Alarm Phone.

    Julia: “Sub-Saharan women are too tired, we suffer all kinds of violence, violence through the Moroccan security, through the Moroccan compatriot. Even Moroccan women have their difficulties. In their households, in their homes, in their surroundings. There are too many cases and there is evidence too. Women do not have a loud voice towards the men in uniform. They don’t open the doors and they don’t listen to us, we’re always there in moments of distress. That’s why we raised our angry shouts. I hope that our message is sent to the Moroccan authorities. We want peace and we have the right to live.”

    Pauline: “We women are brutalised in the house and we have no right to express ourselves. But we as women have to express ourselves, also in the media, so that the people through us understand what is really going on in the field. This is violence in everyday life. But we women want equality.
    March 8 was an opportunity to express ourselves. Because as we walked, there were many people who followed us. We fought, we sent messages. We gave ourselves the right to speak out and we said no to violence against women. We demanded our right to free expression and free movement!”

    Here Pauline’s speech, which unfortunately could not be presented on Women’s Day:

    Me, I am Pauline.

    I am an activist who is concerned about the rights of migrants in Morocco, especially in Tangier, but this struggle is not easy with the new policy of the Moroccan authorities, because we suffer repression by the police and deportation to southern cities and sometimes to the Algerian border. So, we as activists, we are calling for our rights and the rights of migrants.

    As Morocco has signed international conventions on the right of asylum and freedom of movement, the Moroccan authorities are asked to respect international law and not to be the gendarmes of the European Union. It is a bad policy to block migrants in Morocco, neither work nor residence permit, and to prevent migrants from their liberty in order to avoid illegal immigration. But Morocco must try to review its state policies and open the borders so that people can move freely. So that Sub-Saharan migrants can also go to earn a living in Europe as the Europeans can come here and earn their living in Africa. So we simply ask for freedom of movement for everyone and their well-being.

    Thank you very much.

    Stories of Struggles with the Boumla

    After the demonstration, we are together, the friends of the Alarm Phone: Pauline, Carla, Fatou, Co and Julia in Tangier. We tell and listen to each other’s stories about the Boumla (Wolof: police). As Alarm Phone has often reported, persecution, racism, violence and deportations are part of the daily life of black communities in Morocco, especially in the Tangier region. The women describe how they face discrimination on a daily basis and what strategies they have developed against repression.

    Fatou: We stopped the deportation in Rabat

    “Me and Pauline were with friends. We saw the police and we knew they’d take us even though we had papers.

    I said: ‘No, I’m not leaving, I have my passport and I have my residence permit.’ They slapped me and took me to the police station. They told us they’d take us to Tiznit. When we got to Rabat, we told ourselves we had to do something. If not, we’ll end up in Tiznit and it’s far from Tangier. So we revolted together to annoy them. We started to shout, shout with force. The Moroccans, they started to get irritated. And we shouted shouted shouted shouted… and they said “safi, safi safi safi safi” (Arabic: enough). We stopped and we got out in Rabat.”

    Pauline: I didn’t accept it

    “I wanted to talk about the violence I suffered as a woman in Morocco. The police came many times to catch me and take me south. I didn’t accept it, because I don’t know anyone there. At that time, I had my own restaurant in the Medina (Arabic: city). The police sent me to the police station. When I left there, I saw a lot of people and I told myself that if I didn’t do something, they would send me south, to Tiznit. I told the officer that I was sick. He said, ‘No, you’re not sick, you’re going to go out to the bus with the others.’ The bus was already there in front of the door. I was afraid of being deported to Tiznit, because I couldn’t afford to go back to Tangier.

    So, I went to the toilet. I had the second day of my period, so I took off the cotton. I threw it away and went out. There was a lot of blood coming out, it got on my pants, everything was spoiled. I said to the Chief of Police, ‘Look, I’m sick.’ But he said, ‘No, you’re not, get in line…’ That was when I opened my legs. He was surprised and said: ‘Okay, okay, okay.’ He gave me a ride home. So, I went back to work.”

    Julia: The hospital instead of the deportation to Tiznit

    “The last attempt to deport me was in 2019. The Moroccan police came to our house very early in the morning. They wore Kagouls outfits as if we were criminals in our own house. I had lost my residence permit, because I couldn’t renew it. They took us to Tiznit. We couldn’t resist. We were on the road from 8 in the morning until 11 in the evening, without food, water or anything. 2km before reaching to Marrakech I told myself that I had to find a possibility to go down there, because at least it was a city I knew. Just before I got there, I made a lot of noises and had a crisis, they got scared and called an ambulance to pick me up. I really wasn’t sick, I had nothing, it was just a trick so they could release me. So I made gestures, I stopped breathing. In the ambulance they gave me an oxygen mask. When I got to the hospital, they put me on a bench with a mask, by the time they went to find a doctor I took off everything and I ran away…”
    Aurore Boréale, based in Rabat: Only by fighting together can we can have real progress

    Since the dawn of time, human beings have been on the move, looking for green pastures, a milder sky, a better elsewhere or simply out of curiosity. That leads us to the conclusion, that the desire to see what’s on the other side has always been there, and, which leads us to conclude that migration is a phenomenon inherent to living beings. I would even say vital.

    The most shocking thing today is to see how migration has become demonised and criminalised everywhere. Leaving has become anathema, to the point where barriers are being erected everywhere. Means that are being used to hinder freedom of movement, are becoming more and more dramatic every day are being used to hinder freedom of movement, to sort out who is eligible or not. Let us take the case of Morocco: on the one hand, due to its geographical location it is considered the gateway to the Eldorado by many Africans, and also Syrians, Bangladeshis and Filipinos rush to Morocco hoping to live a better life on the other side of the Mediterranean, or perhaps simply to settle there.

    On the other hand, however, while non-dark-skinned migrant communities may enjoy more tranquillity and are not often subject to the most blatant forms of discrimination, the same does not hold true for the black African migrant community in Morocco. The case that interests our report is that of women.

    If yesterday it was rare to see women taking to the migration routes, today that is no longer the case and women migrate as much as men. Today, more women take the routes, swallowing the fear that arises, facing cold, hunger, danger, and closing their ears to not hear about all kinds of violence.

    Today the women are leaving too. But what about the daily life of these women once they have settled in Morocco? A country which, despite progress and openness in terms of women’s rights, remains a country where women do not enjoy practically any of the rights granted to them by law or the constitution. A country where women still remain the inferiors, the subordinates, or simply things belonging to men, to satisfy their impulses or their egos. Basically, I would say, a country where women are not truly free to be who they want to be.

    Migrant women in Morocco have to deal with all this, and additionally with the fact that they are black women. Thus, they are perceived in the collective consciousness of Moroccans as women of little value, of light morals, prostitutes, or beggars: The black woman at the bottom of the ladder that people with an atrophied mentality have decided to create. For some of the migrant brothers or for some chairman’s prey single migrant women’s bodies are there to be exploited when promising them the journey to the Eldorado.

    And they are left to their fate as soon as these men have found more attractive prey. Thus, many women find themselves single mothers, with children whose fathers don’t give a damn, or don’t even want to know. Because of the hard reality, some women find themselves in a relationship and move in with the first one who could offer her a roof over her head, food on her plate, in order to reach the basic comforts. Sometimes it turns out well, sometimes it turns out very problematic. Migrant women who work in private homes are also subject to exploitation, even physical abuse, non-payment of wages that are insignificant compared to the work they do. We can also talk about the difficulty to be respected in public health centres, complications, late care or lack of care on discriminatory and racist grounds. They remain on the margins.

    What I find most appalling is that even in some militant associations, where women are under-represented, they are given less responsibility and no real decision-making power. They are infantilised, or just given a place to serve as a showcase to obtain grants from organisations that take the status of women seriously. Once the grant is awarded, these women are side-lined, without any decision-making power, bullied and subjected to everything that men have decided without them having a say.

    There are organisations, such as UNHCR., Caritas, and CEI (Comité d’Entraide Internationale), which provide assistance to migrant women. But here again, there is the eternal question of eligibility, the unhealthy hierarchy of suffering, the categorisation of migrants. They are classified according to their suffering, according to how they arrived in Morocco, and the migrant who arrives by plane is often not entitled to this little help: “You can’t help everyone”, unless you have a story that holds up, a lie that is worth telling, or if you pretend to be someone you are not.

    I have seen people who really needed help but were not given it, because they did not meet the criteria for it. I know people who died as a result. And even when help is given to these women, it is not free. In one way or another, they remain like prisoners of the organisations, spied upon even on their most intimate affairs. That is the price that has to be paid.

    There are a few women’s associations such as La voix des femmes de Hélène Yalta, the Collective of Migrant Women in Morocco (COFMIMA) and ARCOM, which try as best they can to fight for the status of migrant women in Morocco. But a real struggle for the rights of migrant women, for women’s empowerment, is almost non-existent. The urgency, the need, the survival cries out too loud… It is in dispersed groups, individually that the great majority of women fight. Can we hope for real progress or evolution by fighting in dispersed groups? No, not at all.

    With your courage you can do this work
    Interview with Leonie

    Although the situation in Tangier is becoming more and more difficult for Sub-Saharan travellers, a group of women has been formed, who are active with the Alarm Phone there. We spoke with Leonie, who is new to the group. She has been living in Morocco for 5 years.

    Leonie, why do you take part in the Alarm Phone?

    L: It was a good brother who introduced me to the group. He told me that there is a network of activists, and he said: “I see that you with your courage, you can do this work.”

    Have you already worked here in Morocco in solidarity activities?

    L: I am in almost all the associations in Tangier that bring together migrants. When there is a meeting or a small activity, they invite me. I am almost always present.

    Alarm Phone is a network of activists who help migrants who are already on the water, so that they don’t lose their lives in the water. In case of distress we guide them.

    Can you explain the situation of migrants here in Morocco?

    L: In Morocco it is not easy for migrants. Whether you are regularised or not. It’s very tense. Life is no sugar for us. I myself have suffered the consequences. They’ re breaking your door down. At two o’clock in the morning the soldiers are here, they don’t warn you, they don’t ask if you have papers or not. To your surprise you jump out of your sleep and they break your door down.

    They come home like thieves. They don’t even try to find out if you have papers. You are supposed to say, ‘But sir, I have papers’.

    Once they arrived at my house, I was washing myself around 3am, last summer, so in 2019. The man opened the bathroom and I said, ‘But sir, I’m showering.’ He said: ‘That’s not my problem.’ I said: ‘When you came in, did you ask me if I’m legal or not? You come in my house, but I have my house contract, I have my papers. You want to come in the shower? If you put your head in the bathroom again, I’ll throw the water on you!’ And that’s how he left the toilet.

    It hurts, it’s frustrating. Every year like this, they treat us like animals as if we’re not human. Really, it’s disgusting.

    And as women you don’t have the right to speak up, especially in front of the authorities, they don’t consider you. It hurts you, it stays in your heart. And morally, you don’t have the right to express yourself! That’s the suffering of women here. We’re trying to talk to human rights and women’s rights associations.

    In the work of Alarm Phone – What are the demands?

    L: Alarm Phone demands that borders are open. If someone wants to go out of a country that the person passes freely without being caught and without being violated. This is the demand of Alarm Phone: Freedom of movement!
    Hayat, killed at the border by the Moroccan Navy in September 2017

    In order to prevent the young people from setting out at all, armed force is used in Morocco: On September 25th 2017, the Navy shot and

    killed 19-year-old student Hayat Belkacem from Tétouan. Three men were injured, some of them seriously.

    The four of them, along with 21 other young Moroccans*, had set off from Martil Beach in a “Go-Fast” (speedboat) in the direction of Spain. The Navy wanted to stop the travellers; when the boat started, they opened fire. The hashtag 126102877 #Quiadonnélordre: Who gave the order? went viral afterwards and contradicted the version of the Navy, which allegedly only fired warning shots.

    For days, before Hayat’s death, hundreds of young people had been flocking to the beaches in the north after Spanish videos of successful arrivals in Spain were posted on the Internet. Moroccan security forces had blocked the young Moroccans* from accessing the beaches of northern Morocco. In response, hundreds of young Moroccans* demonstrated in Martil and demanded ‘l’harga fabor’ – their right to free passage: https://youtu.be/ICahwzMzbdM

    After the death of Hayat, people in many cities, including many Ultras, took their anger to the streets. In Tétouan, the people chanted ‘We will avenge you, Hayat!’ as well as ‘We will renounce the Moroccan passport!’ and ‘Viva España’: https://youtu.be/EyXfV-fMoBg

    A student was subsequently sentenced to two years in prison, claiming that his call for protest via Facebook had allegedly insulted the nation of Morocco and called for an uprising. Other young people have also been accused, many of whom are still minors.
    Central Mediterranean: Women on the move
    The invisible struggles

    It is difficult to write about women who cross the Central Mediterranean. It is difficult because, in first place, we don’t want to write ‘about’ women on the move. We would love to write ‘with’ them about their experiences, to use this platform to make their voices heard. However, their stories are often kept invisible, as is the violence they experience on a daily basis. Too often, women crossing the Central Mediterranean route just appear to us as a number communicated by the person who speaks on the phone. A number that we try to clarify several times, to then quickly report it into an email to the authorities or into a tweet: “We were called by a boat in distress, on board there are 60 people fleeing from Libya including 3 children and 8 women, two of them are pregnant”. We rarely hear their voices. Communication with people in distress in the Central Mediterranean is brief and fragmented: it starts with a distress call through a satellite phone, it ends with a satellite phone being thrown into the water. And then silence. A silence that can mean many things, but that too often does not carry good news. This communication through an unstable connection does not allow us to get in touch again, to ask for details, to ask for their names and testimonies once they make it to Europe or when they are returned to violence and war in Libya. And this is how, painfully, the powerful voices of women on the move get lost, and their presence remains fixed in a dry and uncertain number.

    Of course, we often know what is beneath those numbers, and here we could write stories of violence, slavery and torture in Libya. We also know that many women are fleeing not only war or poverty, but also gendered-based violence, forced marriages, harassment due to their sexuality. We could write about their pregnancies, and about the rapes behind them. We could write about what it means to be a mother and to embark on a precarious rubber dinghy holding your child’s hand in the hope that the sea will be less violent than the Libyan camp or the homes they left behind.

    The borders of Europe amplify the violence women flee from, but security measures, surveillance and criminalisation of people’s movement are often legitimised under the flag of combatting human trafficking. With one hand Europe pretends to give protection: it portrays border controls as humanitarian acts to protect ‘vulnerable women’ from ‘bloodthirsty’ traffickers. With the other hand Europe pours money and resources into creating stronger borders, organises trainings and signs deals and agreements to limit freedom of movement, thus fuelling border violence.

    Depicted as vulnerable victims in need of protection, discourses of women’s protection and vulnerability are often used by European member states to put a humanitarian face to the violence they inflict through their border policies.

    While all these intersecting forms of visible and invisible violence make border crossing even more dangerous and lethal for women, we know that women on the move are more than what they are reduced to, and that they bear a power and a strength that no border is able to defeat. This is what we would love to write about, and this is what we learn from the testimonies and experiences collected here.
    Women on the phone

    In a few situations, we talked to women in distress who called the Alarm Phone, and since then, when the communication is difficult, we ask the people on the phone to let us talk to a woman on board.

    As Alarm Phone, we talk to people during their journey. For us they are voices in distress that we try to comfort, with difficulty. We ask for their GPS coordinates and they try to read us numbers. It’s hard to be on the phone with people who could drown any moment and to ask them to read numbers. They just want to tell you that the sea is too big and the boat is too small. They want to tell you that they don’t want to go back to Libya, that they’d rather die at sea. They ask us to help. They tell us that they’re sick, that they won’t make it, that there’s water in the boat, lots of water, too much water. They ask why we haven’t arrived yet, and why we keep asking for numbers. And how do you explain that you’re not at sea, but in England, or France, or Germany? How to explain that you called for help but that European authorities aren’t answering your requests, and are letting them die at sea? How do you explain that the only thing we can do is to write down these numbers, and that because of these numbers their lives might be rescued?

    More than once, a chaotic situation where communication seemed impossible and where we feel that we will never be able to clarify the GPS coordinates of the boat, was solved by simply talking to a woman, as it was reported by a shift team: “they passed the phone to a woman, she speaks clearly, she is calm. She listens carefully and she understands how to find the GPS coordinates on the phone. She spells out the numbers: ‘North, 34 degrees, 22 minutes…’ She is confident and she explains the situation. She said that there are sick people on the boat and that there is little fuel left. We keep regular contact, she knows what she has to do and how to continue.”

    It is in these volatile moments, in these few exchanges and in the courage that we hear in their voices, that the invisible struggles of women on the move in the Central Mediterranean become visible. Their voices become weapons against the brutal border regimes, a weapon, on which the lives of 100 fellow travellers depend. We wish we could hear more of these voices, and that we could talk to them and hear their voices beyond distress situations, as we did with Daniella and Abeni, who are still in Tunisia, or as we did with Kobra, who managed to reach Germany.

    Trapped by the UNHCR
    Speaking to Daniella, Tunisia

    Daniella comes from the English-speaking part of Cameroon. The war has been escalating since 2016. Her husband has been murdered and she also lost her mother in that war. She belongs to a politically marked family as part of the opposition. She left the country in October 2017. Since she left, she didn’t hear from the rest of her family.

    She crossed Nigeria, Niger, Algeria and Libya before crossing the border to Tunisia. She was arrested at Ben Guerdane, where her fingerprints were collected. She was in facilities of the Red Crescent and the UNHCR in Medenine, and then taken to the Ibn Khaldun centre in August 2018. She was registered with UNHCR and underwent 4 interviews, in which she was asked the same questions, trying to ‘trap her’ on dates. Her request was denied. She was told she could very well go back to the English-speaking part of Cameroon: “But if you go to this area as a francophone, you are in danger because people will think you’re a spy.”

    During her stay at the centre, Daniella often organised sports activities such as football games, which did not please the UNHCR. She was also very active, taking part in the various demonstrations organised by the refugees and asylum seekers of the centre to protest against their living conditions and to denounce the practices of the UNHCR.

    Since UNHCR rejected her asylum application, she no longer receives food coupons. She decided to leave the centre after being pressured by UNHCR to make room for others. “It’s their strategy, they embarrass you to make you go away”. Today she lives in a small apartment with two other people. She says she doesn’t have the courage to appeal UNHCR’s decision. It has been 11 months since she left the centre.

    The crossing from Tunisia costs about 1000 Euros. She intends to attempt the crossing. Their group of 14 people is ready. The smuggler asked them to wait until the weather improves, saying it’s only a matter of a couple of days. It’s already been two weeks that they’re waiting for the weather to get better to cross the border. A month ago, migrants have been intercepted. They are not imprisoned unless they are found to be smugglers.

    She also crossed the ditch; it is about three metres deep. There was no water at the bottom, but there was mud. To climb, some men helped her, braiding clothes to hoist her up. The desert is full of aggressive dogs. She had to walk for a long time with her baby and a friend from the Ivory Coast before she came across the military. The military knew their number, they had to identify their group well in advance (they asked where the men were, looking for a group of 18 people). The soldiers were equipped with huge searchlights sweeping across the desert. After you cross the ditch, there’s a barbed-wire fence three meters high. Crossing this border costs about 300 Euros.
    Intercepted to Tunisia
    Interview with Abeni, Tunsia

    Abeni left Nigeria in 2017. She lived in a southern province. Her husband’s father was killed and her husband was threatened, so the family had to flee the country.

    She arrived in Tunisia in May 2017 while she was 6 months pregnant with her first child. Her boat ran out of petrol and was rescued by the Tunisian authorities and handed over to IOM. They were taken to Medenine by bus to an IOM shelter that shut down in March 2019. She remained in this centre for one year and asked to see UNHCR, but for one year she was only offered the voluntary return. It wasn’t until a year later that she was able to go to a UNHCR centre.

    She went to Zarzis with her husband for the UNHCR interview. Her husband, who only speaks Ikâ, was given a translation by phone. A few months later they received a negative response from UNHCR, telling them that the events that they had raised could not be verified on the net, and that it was a family problem.

    She says that few Nigeriens are accepted, with the exception of single women with children (one of whom has been relocated). They appealed against this decision by filling out a form, without an interview, but were again given a rejection. The UNHCR gave them three days to leave the centre, along with her two daughters, aged two years and six months. This happened one year ago. They refused, were able to stay but they no longer have food coupons and no more help from the UNHCR.

    When she talks to the staff, they pretend to ignore her. UNHCR has not renewed their cards. They have stopped paying for medical expenses, while the baby has to go to hospital regularly. The Doctor said it was because he was suffering from the cold. Her husband tries to work but there are no opportunities in Medenine. He went to Sfax but he got himself arrested and imprisoned for two days for not having papers. Without documents, they have no freedom of movement. The second baby wasn’t registered in Tunisia. UNHCR refused to accompany them.

    Her husband wants to go back to Libya to attempt the crossing, but she doesn’t want to and stayed in Tunisia. The UNHCR still wants to kick the family out of the shelter but can’t do it due to the current coronavirus pandemic.
    We felt welcome
    Kobra’s testimony, rescued by the Ocean Viking in September 2019

    My name is Kobra. I am 18 years old and I come from Somalia. I want to tell you the story of my rescue in the Mediterranean Sea on September 2019. I don’t know how to find the words to describe the suffering I went through, and I don’t want to remember what happened before I left Libya. I also never want to forget the moment, after nearly two days at sea, when we finally saw a small sailing-boat on the horizon that ended our suffering.

    We were full of fear, because finally our phone, our only connection to the world, had stopped functioning and water was rapidly entering the boat. It was a miracle when we finally found this sail-boat. We were about 45-50 people in a blue rubber boat, and seven of us onboard were coming from Somalia. One pregnant woman was traveling with her 1-year-old child and her husband. She is now doing well because she was transferred to Germany after the rescue.

    I never learned how to swim, so the idea of the boat flooding was a possible death sentence to me.

    I have a video a friend took on the boat and you can see the expressions of relief and happiness in everyone’s faces when we spotted the sailboat. There are no words to describe how you feel when you realize that your journey across the sea is over. It was a German sailboat, which was too small to take us on board. They came to us and asked us, if we could speak English. They then told us that they would call for the OCEAN VIKING a big rescue ship to come and take us on board. They gave us jackets and life-vests, because the weather was getting rougher and colder.

    Later, when it was dark, it started raining and the waves got bigger. The small German boat took us to OCEAN VIKING which took us aboard. There were already other people with them who had been rescued earlier that day. Even the rescuers seemed so happy that we were all safe. They had doctors on board and they gave us medical treatment, since my pregnant friend and I had had vomited a lot. I had a heavy allergic reaction on my skin as well because the sea irritated my skin condition after being exposed to the salt for so long.

    On the OCEAN VIKING we found another pregnant woman, whom I think was from Nigeria. She was brought by a helicopter to Malta because she was very close to delivering her baby. The crew later made an announcement to tell us when the baby was born in Malta.

    We were on the OCEAN VIKING for one week because no country wanted to take us in. This time was difficult, but it was much better than what we experienced before. The crew was always with us and they tried to support us however they could. We had enough food. We had a doctor whenever we felt sick. They even gave us clothing. We felt welcome.

    Finally, Lampedusa decided to take us in. When we finally left the boat after such a long time at sea it was not as warm of a welcome. We received food only after being forced to give our fingerprints and we were brought to a dirty place with barbed wire. I could not stay in Italy; the conditions were so poor. Today I struggle to live in Germany with the fear of my fingerprints on record and that I will be deported back to Italy.

    I will never forget the good people on these ships, who welcomed me before I arrived in Europe. They will stay in my memory. Maybe, one day I will meet them again. Until then I want to encourage them to continue what they are doing and I send them all my greetings.

    SAR Solidarity
    Letter from an Alarm Phone activist to an amazing woman of the SAR world in January 2020

    The past 5 days were crazy, my dear friend. We never met, but I have read the stories that you wrote on board of the rescue ship. Nine boats in distress fleeing from Libya called the Alarm Phone, and for the first time in a long time, all the boats that called Alarm Phone from the Central Mediterranean where rescued to Europe, more than 650 people in 5 days. This was not just about luck. It was about the incredible efforts of the people out there doing everything they could to rescue these boats, despite European authorities’ efforts to let them sink without trace. These were efforts mostly by women. Wonderful, fierce, kind, fearless women like you. In the past, I have mostly have dealt with men at sea and it was difficult. These 5 days were joyful instead.

    L., she crossed the Mediterranean up and down 3 times in 72 hours without ever sleeping, just following the GPS coordinates that we had received from the people in distress, which we also forwarded to the authorities and to the rescue ships. After sending an email, I would call the bridge. Again and again, for 72 hours. I would call the bridge telling her, “L.! There is a boat in distress again you need to be quick”. I never heard moment of discomfort in her voice. Even under that pressure, she was trying to create little cracks of softness, of love, of solidarity, of laughter. When I hear her voice on the phone, saying “my boat will head to the target with full speed”, I picture her behind the wheel of this massive boat carrying 400 people, flying above the sea as if it was weightless. I cannot find the words to describe the love and respect I feel towards her when I read her emails to the authorities, defying their orders, placing herself and ‘her boat’ against the orders given by some Colonel of the Armed Forced of Malta, or of some Commander of the Libyan Navy. I think there are no words in this world to express the magnitude of certain actions.

    On the phone, we tell the people in distress that they have to stay strong and keep calm, that they have to trust us, that they cannot give up. We tell them “rescue is coming for you my friend, don’t worry”. When you’re out at sea, lost in the darkness.

    Then Luisa and ‘her boat’ arrive, to the rescue, after hours of darkness and uncertainty. After hours when they thought they had been abandoned by everyone, and that they had been forgotten in a sea that is too big, on a boat that is too small. After so many hours of exhaustion, there is certain magic in the moment when we can tell them “make light, with a telephone, don’t use flames – make yourself visible.” There is magic in the few words spoken by voices broken by panic and excitement “we see a boat, it’s red”, and in an email of few words from the rescue ship we read “we see an intermittent light coming from the sea, we believe it is the rubber boat”. I imagine this little light shining above a sea that is a cold, dark, liquid cemetery. A sign of life, of resistance, of struggle. Not just of despair.

    Then silence. One second you are head and body in the Mediterranean, the next you are in silence and you realise that hours have passed. From this side of the phone we do not know what happens in this silence. It’s a feeling that makes you feel completely detached from reality.

    Waking up reading the stories you write about these rescues, my dear friend, I always cry. Reading your descriptions of the rescue, reading the stories of the people who were on board, it makes it all real, it fills the void of these silences.

    Reading your stories makes me think of all the witches of the sea like you, like L., like the women of Alarm Phone and the women crossing the Mediterranean, who relentlessly struggle together in this hostile sea. The Morganas of the sea, the few little lights in this darkness, sparks that are reflected by the waves, as magic as fairies and as fierce as witches.

    I cannot stop being inspired by all these women, who cannot be stopped, contained, tamed. So yes, it is hard work also for all of us, and many people think we are crazy for doing this work, but we know that we are not the crazy ones, and that we are part of a brigade of amazing witches who believe that the real craziness is looking away. Thank you.
    From the crossing of the Aegean Sea to the struggle for women rights. Women on Lesvos
    All women against Moria

    Most women have already endured hardship even before they get into a boat to cross the Mediterranean Sea. But the journey is far from being over once they reach the shore. Many of them find themselves in overcrowded refugee camps, such as Moria on the Greek island of Lesvos, where the authorities are overwhelmed with numbers and unable or unwilling to provide the most basic needs such as clean water, electricity, shelter, medical care and security. It is a harsh environment where the strongest rules and violence is part of everyday life which leads to an existence dictated by constant fear. In this rough environment, solidarity is a vital tool for survival, especially among women.

    On January 30th 2020, approximately 450 women and children gathered in Mytilene, the capital of Lesvos, to protest the horrific living conditions in the camp and the dramatic increase of violence– including several fatal stabbings that had taken place within the previous weeks. The protest was organized by a group of about 15 Afghan women, and their goal was to draw attention to the dire situation. It was both a cry of despair as well as a powerful and loud manifestation of female solidarity when women of all ages and different nationalities took to the streets and blocked the traffic for several hours.

    “All women against Moria“, “Women in solidarity“, “Moria is a women’s hell“ and “Stop all violence against women“ was written on some of the many signs. The crowd chanted “Assadi“ (farsi: freedom) with raised fists. Several women said that it was the first time they had participated in a demonstration, but they showed great confidence during negotiations with the police or when giving media interviews. An elderly Afghan woman explained that she had focussed on caring for her family all her life but the hellish situation in Moria had given her no choice but to join the demonstration.

    Many women kept their faces hidden behind hijabs, voluminous scarves, and surgical face masks to conceal their identity. In the past, well placed rumours had been circulating that political involvement and contact with the press would lead to immediate deportation and repression by the Greek authorities. Taking this into account, 450 protesters is an astonishing number. Even more so considering the difficulties a trip from Moria to the islands capital, Mytilene, includes. For example, people have to cue for several hours to be able to get into one of the few busses. It has been reported that bus drivers had to push people away with sticks to be able to close the door. If you did make it onto the bus, you would miss your meals for that day as you weren’t able to stand in the food line. We also heard reports that a larger number of women were prevented from leaving the camp to join the demonstration by the authorities and police forces.

    No flyers, no Facebook group, no official announcement. News of the women-only-protest was spread by word of mouth. The success of the demonstration was a surprise to many, especially the police, who initially showed up with only 10 riot-cops. After the protest, 9 female volunteers were taken to the police station, where their identity cards were checked. Their sneaking suspicion is that they were the ones organising the women’s protest. The officials seemed to be unable to grasp the idea that women from Moria could organise efficiently. The women’s role in the camps traditionally has been to calm the male-dominated unrests rather than taking part in them or even initiating them. But times are desperate and increasingly women are discovering their political voice. They are finding strength in female cooperation. There had been an all-women sit-in last October after the tragic death of a woman in a gas explosion in the camp. Assemblies, empowerment workshops, networking and practical support are less visible and yet essential aspects of the politicisation of women.

    Experiences of crossings and life in Moria

    Again this year, with the increase in the number of people arriving on the island and the non-reaction of the Greek and European authorities, the conditions in Moria have only gotten worse and worse. When you talk with the women living there, their daily life comprises of fear, no rest, long lines, attacks, power cuts… but also solidarity amongst each other, survival strategies and the struggle to be able to decide about their own lives. There are the stories of three women, F, N, and J.

    F left Iran: “Unfortunately, in Iran members of my family did not have identity cards. We couldn’t go to school. We just had to work. My older sister and I worked as tailors in a basement. I started working when I was 12 years old. I have a passion for education. Finally, this year my sister and I decided on leaving in search of something better. Finally, my parents accepted. So, we started our travels. During our journey we tolerated several difficulties. Upon arrival to Lesvos, we slept two nights on the streets because we had to wait until Monday for when the offices of Moria opened. Finally, we could get a tent.”

    N and J arrived on the island of Lesvos by boat last December crossing over from Turkey. Both are living in Moria today. For J “each person has their own way to experience and to bear the crossing of the Mediterranean Sea”. She had to pay 450 USD to the person who organised the crossing and was told: ‘In 4 days we will come to pick you up at 23 o’clock at the hostel.’

    She tells us her story: “…they put us in a covered pick-up truck, we were a lot and really squeezed together. Four hours later we arrived in a very dark place. They put us in an abandoned house without any water or food all day long until 7 pm. Then we walked 5 hours up and down in the Turkish hills. Finally, we arrived on the shoreline. They inflated the dinghy in front of us. We left close to midnight. 1.5 hours later the Turkish coastguards stopped us on the sea and they brought us back to Turkey. We were 29 people on board. When they released us we went back to Izmir. I didn’t have any strength anymore. The smugglers told me ‘you have to leave.’ Two days later we tried again. Same group, same way. Five hours of walking again. And again, we couldn’t reach Greece. The big boats came close to our rubber boat to make big waves and they were yelling at us to leave and go back to Turkey. This time we spent one week in the police station. The third time, we arrived in Greek waters and called the Greek Coastguard, that came to pick us up. But we had to throw away our personal belongings because the boat was filling up with water. There was complete disorder on board, no organisation. After we had called them for the first time, we still waited three hours until they came to pick us up.”

    N spoke about how “the fear comes when you’re at sea. You didn’t know who your neighbour was, but you held their hand. We started to pray. On the open sea the water was coming inside the boat. Each one was calling for God in his own way. I didn’t want to go on the boat, but they pushed me. The kids were in the middle. Me as well. I closed my eyes. We landed without any police, only fishermen. It was raining. I was wet and we had to wait 15 minutes more for the bus. What gave us our hope back, was this woman, who gave us chips and sent her kids to say hello to us. They let us on the bus and we sat there until the morning without giving us anything”

    J described her situation after being registered in Moria: “I didn’t have any tent in which to sleep. I slept from tent to tent. They kick you out of the tent when you cough too much. The few that we had, they would steal it. I was scared to be stabbed, mainly during the night and someone would do it just to take your phone. The worst is that the authorities don’t let us leave the island.”

    https://alarmphone.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/25/2020/04/aegean2-1-768x1024.jpeg

    Your whole life is waiting in line

    For the refugees, lines are running a big part of their daily and social lives. As N and I were talking over some tea, N had to leave us to go stand in line for food. Very often they have to miss a workshop, a class, a commitment, or a friends-gathering to go stand in line for a basic necessity. Sometimes it gets so late that people have to return to their tents in Moria, even if they did not receive what they had been standing in line for all day. And the day is done. J told us that: “In the morning, when you wake up, the first thing that you have to do is line-up. We line-up for every basic need. We pee in buckets since the toilets are too far away and we have to wait in line to use them. It’s infernal to wait and the belly burns. During the night especially, the toilets are too far to reach. And the toilets are dirty, so you easily get itchy. The Moria medical tent usually gives paracetamol to calm the itchiness down… To take a shower is the same. You wait in the cold, and sometimes when you arrive the shower is clogged”. N added: “You have to stand in line, but you know that someone can come and stab you for your phone while you wait. It has happened a few times since I have been here, and people have died just waiting. I am scared when I have to go stand in line. One time, they didn’t clean the floor and we had to line up standing on the blood of a guy who was stabbed. I was so scared, it was horrible.”

    F also described the situation in a letter: “When you get up you must stand in a line for breakfast, lunch, diner, toilet, shower: for everything! You wait about 2.5 hours in each line. Your whole life is waiting in a line. We have only two places for doctor’s visits, which is not enough for thousands of people. Again, you have to wait in a line. Only the people that go at 4 o’clock in the morning have the opportunity to be checked. If you have a cold, standing in a line outside is bad for your health. You will get worse. If you have a headache, cold, flu or pain in your back or leg… it doesn’t matter. Doctors just give you painkillers and tell you to drink water.”

    Z, is an underaged Afghan girl, who lives in the jungle of Moria with her family. She wrote the following in a letter: “There is a toilet but at night it’s so hard to go to the toilet because we have to cross a small bridge and we can’t’ see anything because there is no light. I am under 18 and they don’t give me food because my mother is not here and when my father got sick, I was given the task to wait in line for food for the family but they didn’t give it to me because I am a minor. Life here is so hard: washing clothes, caring for my little sister, my brother and father. It’s so hard for me. I miss my mum.”

    Living in Moria is like living in jail. You are constantly living in fear. “Inactivity makes people go crazy. You will pass 6 months here without realising it”. You have nothing to do, nothing that you can do to be a part of civil society. The lines are dehumanising. People become a ticket, a plate, a bottle of milk, a croissant or a bag of clothes,” J explained.
    Self-organisation and a daily life strategy

    For N solidarity is important: “We also have to accept each other and the situation. I cannot eat too late, but when the electricity comes back at 2 am, I cannot prevent the others to talk, to eat and to cook. So, I put my earphones on and cover my eyes. In any case, I don’t sleep well. I refuse to take the medication that they give me to sleep, because we know that boys spend the nights in the alleys. With the canvas walls of the tents, you can feel the people passing by close to you and your head, and I want to be awake in case something happens. To eat warm and cooked food, we have to prepare the food before the electricity comes on. The last time, my tent’s mates put the potatoes in the pan and everything was ready, but they had only 10 minutes of electricity. So they had to wait, but when the power came back the food was not good anymore. As they were hungry, they added some milk. I don’t know how they ate it.”

    N continues: “In my tent we are 7 people plus a little girl. We sleep on the floor and each one puts their stuff around their sleeping place. We keep the middle of the tent open to cook and sit, and eat together. It is important to show solidarity, so I said to the women that we have to protect each other and when one of us has to go stand in line early in the morning, some of us go with her until daylight comes. Also, the women in my tent dance and sing, do braids, and find time to do what they want, and that’s strengthening for me.”

    J talked about solidarity concerning food: “The food in Moria is disgusting and gives you diarrhoea, meaning you then have to go stand in line for the toilets. Can you imagine! We collect money, around one euro per person, and we give it to the person, who cooks for the day. Every day it is a new person.”

    When women cross the sea, and even before then along the journey, they often have different experiences than men and are exposed to greater danger. Being on the move is a difficult situation, but being on the move and being a woman puts you in an even more vulnerable position. Specific issues related to gender discrimination and racism are being reported by the women on Lesbos that we were talking to:

    The women that we talked to speak about racism against black people within the hotspot, but also in the city. For example, a woman told us that in one supermarket, whenever a black person enters, a guard will follow that person around. She also told us that black women are often offered money in the street for sexual services. Prostitution is undoubtedly happening a lot, there lacks public information or data about this invisible side of this kind of unbearable situation on the island. It is clear, however, that human traffickers take advantage of the overcrowded and unsafe situation in Moria and that people are doing business with women and kids. And since the administration is overwhelmed, people can wait up to three months to be registered and to be able to benefit from the “cash programme for refugees”. Three months without any money.

    As we are writing this report, and just a few weeks before the international women’s day, there are five women locked-up in different police stations on Lesbos. They were arrested after trying to leave the island without proper papers. They have been arrested as part of a pilot project to see if this idea for a new law can be implemented: The new law indicates that a person who has been arrested must stay detained until the end of the asylum application. This would mean that all asylum seekers, who can be arrested for any illegitimate reason, would have to wait in detention.

    Having daily contact with women living in Moria, you can see how solidarity starts with their everyday basic needs and continues with the provision of psychosocial human support in an effort to protect each other’s security, rights, and sanity in the face of the dire situations they face every day.
    LGBTQI+ people on the move

    We don’t want to overlook women’s experiences of discrimination and the needs of different vulnerable groups, but considering this report is about gender-based discrimination and violence, the situation of LGBTQI+ people on the move has to also be mentioned.

    This report uses the acronym LGBTQI +: it is used to refer to people who identify as lesbian (L), gay (G), bisexual (B), trans (T), intersex (I), queer (Q) and + for all the different expressions and intimate relation with (no)gender identity and sexual definition: non-binary, asexual, aromantic, etc.

    Those who are LGBTQI+ face an even more difficult reality because they cannot always count on the national solidarity networks. And even when these resources are mobilized, it is often at the cost of important precautions so as not to be identified as LGBTQI+. Housing in camps and collectives of LGBTQI + people with other non-LGBTQI+ in asylum accommodations can cause anxieties regarding being mis-identified or ‘outed’ unwillingly (for their sexual orientation or gender identities). This is especially the case for trans people in accommodation facilities who find themselves living in single-sex housing that does not correspond to their gender identity. Because most of the time the authorities mis-gender trans persons, using the sex that is written on their official papers. Later on, when it comes to the asylum request, LGBTQI+ people fear that information about their sexual orientation or gender identity might start to circulate within the communities. This produces a lot of hesitations concerning what to say in front of the court, causing sorrow and fear because a large part of the LGBTQI+ people particularly pay attention not to reveal the reasons for their presence in Europe.

    From the perspective of Alarm Phone, writing about LGBTQI+ people on the move during the situations they encounter while the crossing on sea is difficult, because of course people also try and hide their identity in situations of close confinement, because it is a risk of discrimination and violence is very high. We can hardly provide a general analysis about people on the move because there is only partial knowledge available. Statistics are often binary and queer people are not mentioned.
    Lesvos LGBTQI+ refugee solidarity

    This is taken from a text that was published by members of the group in 2019

    As another deadly winter sets in, Moria prison camp on Lesvos is over its capacity by the thousands and growing fuller every day. In these conditions, LGBTQI+ refugees are particularly at risk of exposure, violence, and death.

    With homosexuality still illegal in 72 countries, it is obvious why many LGBTQI+ people became refugees. Many of us fled from home because we had to hide our gender identities. When we arrive on Lesvos, expecting safety, we are shocked to find the same issues continue for us here. Homophobic harassment and violent attacks are frequent and severe: by fellow residents as well as by the police and camp guards.

    We know some LGBTQI+ people that have been beaten and even hospitalised from homophobic and transphobic attacks. All have had to repress their identity, living cheek by jowl among communities which replicate the persecution they fled in the first place.

    “When I was in the boat, a beautiful cry came. We’re starting a new life. We were just throwing all our troubles into the sea. I wasn’t scared. I just read the Qur‘an and cried. I sat in the boat, my hand was in the sea along the way.”

    “I left Morocco because for 30 years I was insulted, persecuted and beaten by the community, the police and my family, but on Lesvos I found the same thing.”

    “In the early days in Moria, I was systematically raped. I‘ve seen the most difficult conditions, but I‘ve never seen such a horrible place.”

    “These people are looking at you like you’re rubbish. Like you smell. On the street, on the bus. I don’t know how to explain this. Even when you are on the street, you feel ashamed, like there is shit on you.”

    “If we can’t dress up the way we want, if we can’t do our make-up, why come to Europe?“

    “And together we will change the world, so that people will never have to come out again!”

    We did not flee our homes only to continue to hide and live in fear. We won’t be silenced. We won’t be ignored. We will shout it from the rooftops: we are gay, we are lesbian, we are women, we are men. We are here. We are all migrants. We want our freedom we won’t wait ‘till it‘s given to us. We ask those that hear us to fight alongside us, wherever you are.

    Queer solidarity smashes borders!

    https://alarmphone.org/en/2020/04/08/struggles-of-women-on-the-move
    #femmes #résistance #migrations #réfugiés #asile #lutte #luttes #femmes_migrantes #Tanger #Maroc #solidarité #Rabat #invisibilité #Tunisie #Méditerranée_centrale #Ocean_Viking #Mer_Egée #Moria #Lesbos #Grèce #attente #LGBT #genre

    ping @karine4 @isskein @_kg_

  • Phone tracking grows with COVID-19. Scruff wants out of it - Protocol
    https://www.protocol.com/scruff-rejects-selling-location-data

    Phone tracking is having a moment, but gay dating app Scruff wants no part of it Location data is big business, and is now at the center of efforts to study the spread of COVID-19. But who’s in control ? A few years ago, a particular type of email began showing up in the inbox of Eric Silverberg, whose gay dating app, Scruff, allows members to search for potential matches who are nearby. They were pitches from location-data brokers, telling the CEO he was sitting on a lucrative trove of (...)

    #smartphone #géolocalisation #FAI #métadonnées #BigData #DataBrokers #LGBT #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #CCPA (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##Scruff

  • Russian-led troll network based in west Africa uncovered | Technology | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/mar/13/facebook-uncovers-russian-led-troll-network-based-in-west-africa

    Fake Facebook, Instagram and Twitter accounts seemed to aim to inflame divides in US A newly discovered Russian-led network of professional trolls was being outsourced to Ghanaian and Nigerian operatives, according to Facebook and Twitter, who removed the network’s accounts on Thursday. The network was small : just 49 Facebook accounts, 85 Instagram accounts and 71 Twitter accounts in question. But it marks the first time that a Russian information operation targeting the US has been found (...)

    #manipulation #élections #LGBT #lutte #Facebook #Instagram #Twitter

    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/eef81e670ca3f51b686a70102c21eb602d0347bb/0_115_3500_2100/master/3500.jpg

    • Les russes opéraient depuis l’Afrique de l’ouest : la preuve, leurs IP chinoises étaient routées via l’Australie et la Terre de feu.

      (Quand vont-ils cesser de déblatérer sur ce sujet ?)

      Vous rendez-vous compte ?! Il y avait 49 comptes sur Facebook, et ils ont fait basculer les élections américaines, britanniques et martiennes ! Les vénusiens se sont heureusement protégés, et ont coupé les communications avec toutes les adresses IP géolocalisées en Afrique et en Sibérie.

  • En défense de l’anonymat sur Internet - Médias / Net - Télérama.fr
    https://www.telerama.fr/medias/au-nom-des-riens,n6115393.php

    Mise à jour du 17 février 2020 : à la suite de la publication de photos intimes du candidat LREM à la mairie de Paris, Benjamin Griveaux, plusieurs personnalités politiques et les éditorialistes habituels se sont empressés de désigner l’anonymat du web comme le coupable idéal. Alors que le geste a été revendiqué par un artiste russe, Piotr Pavlenski, que le lien vers les clichés a été relayé en messages privés puis par un député non inscrit (Joachim Son-Forget) et un futurologue médiatique (Laurent (...)

    #Facebook #LGBT #anonymat

  • Un juge fédéral américain ordonne la libération de Chelsea Manning - Page 1 | Mediapart
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/120320/un-juge-federal-americain-ordonne-la-liberation-de-chelsea-manning

    L’ancienne analyste militaire, à l’origine des révélations de Wikileaks sur les exactions américaines en Irak et en Afghanistan, était en prison pour avoir refusé de témoigner dans le cadre d’une instruction judiciaire secrète menée sur le site de Julian Assange. Un juge fédéral de Virginie a ordonné vendredi la libération de Chelsea Manning. L’ancienne analyste militaire américaine de 32 ans à l’origine des révélations du site Wikileaks en 2010 sur la torture et les meurtres de civils perpétrés par l’armée (...)

    #Wikileaks #surveillance #prison #LGBT #frontières #procès #militaire #ICE

  • Life after Google : Ex-employees keep speaking out - Protocol
    https://www.protocol.com/employees-life-after-google-activism

    A former engineer is the latest to criticize the company in public. A former Google engineer published a long online essay Friday explaining why he quit the Silicon Valley giant, the latest in a genre of public missives arriving in an age of ethical dilemmas for tech workers — and during an era of activism at Google. Bruce Hahne, who worked at Google for almost 15 years, wrote on his website, the Alphabet Workers Alliance, that he left because "Google’s current business practices and ethics (...)

    #travail #LGBT #conditions #sexisme #technologisme #Google #livre

  • Pourquoi la revente de l’app Grindr par son propriétaire chinois est un « enjeu de sécurité nationale » - Cyberguerre
    https://cyberguerre.numerama.com/3751-pourquoi-la-revente-de-lapp-grindr-par-son-proprietaire-c

    Un groupe d’investisseurs américain va s’offrir Grindr pour plus de 608 millions de dollars. Son propriétaire actuel, le chinois Kunlun Tech, a été forcé d’effectuer cette vente par le gouvernement américain en 2019. C’est la fin d’une année indécise pour l’application de rencontre gay Grindr. Kunlun Tech, l’entreprise chinoise propriétaire de l’app, va vendre son bien pour plus de 608 millions de dollars à un groupe d’investisseurs, d’après Reuters et le Financial Times. L’an dernier, le comité sur (...)

    #manipulation #LGBT #BigData #Tinder #OkCupid #Grindr #TikTok #Kunlun

    //c0.lestechnophiles.com/cyberguerre.numerama.com/content/uploads/sites/2/2020/03/Grindr-app-et-logo.jpg

  • Plus de 100 cinéastes LGBTQ vont boycotter le festival israélien
    Alex Ritman, The Hollywood Reporter, le 2 mars 2020
    https://agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2020/03/02/plus-de-100-cineastes-lgbtq-vont-boycotter-le-festival-israelie

    Parmi les signataires :
    Charlotte Prodger, lauréate du prix Turner,
    Alain Guiraudie, nominé pour la Palme d’Or,
    Harjant Gill, cinéaste indien de documentaires primé,
    Ian Iqbal Rashid, réalisateur de Touch of Pink, basé au Royaume-Uni,
    Raquel Freire, réalisatrice et scénariste portugaise,
    Su Friedrich, cinéaste d’avant-garde primée,
    Thomas Allen Harris, lauréat du prix Tribeca Nelson Mandela,
    Sarah Schulman, universitaire, historienne du sida et scénariste de renom,
    John Greyson, réalisateur canadien primé
    Adrian Stimson, lauréat du prix du Gouverneur général,
    Elle Flanders et Tamira Sawatzki de Public Studio,
    Richard Fung, artiste vidéo primé,
    Andre Perez, réalisateur de America in Transition,
    Catherine Gund d’Aubin Pictures,
    Adelina Anthony et Marisa Becerra de la société de production latinx AdeRisa

    130 Queer Filmmakers Pledge Not to Participate in Israeli Government Sponsored LGBT Film Festival
    Queer Cinema For Palestine, Mars 2020
    https://queercinemaforpalestine.org

    #Palestine #Cinéma #LGBTQ #Boycott #Boycott_culturel

  • Entretien avec Gabrielle Richard : l’école est-elle une fabrique de petit.e.s hétéros ? (URBANIA)
    https://urbania.fr/article/entretien-avec-gabrielle-richard-lecole-est-elle-une-fabrique-de-petit-e-s-h

    La chercheuse québécoise vient de sortir Hétéro, l’école ?, un petit livre mauve à glisser entre toutes les mains, et peut-être plus particulièrement celles des enseignant.e.s. Elle y dresse un constat sans appel : l’école du XXIème siècle continue de véhiculer des injonctions à l’hétérosexualité, tout en validant et en reproduisant des normes de genres binaires et des inégalités. Dans une France où parler de genre et d’éducation sexuelle à l’école est quasi mission impossible sans risquer de réveiller les réacs de tout poil, ce livre fait du bien et surtout, donne des clefs pour repenser l’école et la rendre plus accueillante pour les jeunes LGBTQI.

    #éducation #école #genre #éducation_sexuelle #LGBTQI+

    Hétéro, l’école ? Plaidoyer pour une éducation antioppressive à la sexualité de Gabrielle Richard
    http://www.editions-rm.ca/livres/hetero-lecole

  • Donner des bloqueurs de puberté à des enfants dits « trans » équivaut à un saut dans l’inconnu. | TRADFEM
    https://tradfem.wordpress.com/2020/02/24/donner-des-bloqueurs-de-puberte-a-des-enfants-dits-%e2%80%89trans

    La triptoréline est présentée par les cliniques du genre comme un « bouton de pause » qui ne bloque pas nécessairement la puberté pour toujours, mais peut offrir un « répit » pendant que des jeunes décident de franchir ou non l’étape de la transition sexuelle. Sinon, il leur suffit d’arrêter de prendre les bloqueurs et la puberté naturelle s’enclenchera. Quel parent, face à un enfant en grande détresse, hésiterait à appuyer sur un tel bouton ?

    • L’autrice pose la question parce que c’est un gros débat dans d’autres pays où le progrès est désormais incarné par la possibilité pour des enfants prépubères de s’engager contre l’avis de leurs parents dans des parcours trans dont certains effets sont irréversibles. Toute autre position est considérée comme « transphobe », le mot magique pour désavouer ses adversaires. Alors que... beaucoup de jeunes ont de problèmes avec leur corps, beaucoup ont des problèmes avec l’homophobie de leur entourage qu’ils et elles ont ou non intériorisée et on les aiguille vers des parcours trans de manière légère au vu de tout ça. C’est bien de laisser la porte ouverte mais pas d’y engouffrer une partie, grosse ou petite, de gosses qui sont seulement gays, lesbiennes ou pas des clichés genrés. Parce que les détransitions sont vraiment douloureuses : infertilité, corps qui ne « passe » plus dans aucun genre, sentiment d’être désormais incomplet·e et... attaques violentes de certain·es activistes trans qui accusent des jeunes de 20 ans qui témoignent de leur parcours d’être des suppôts de la #LGBTphobie ! Bref, merci @tradfem de mettre à disposition ces articles bien documentés - même si certains sont de fait #transphobes et inutilement méprisants envers les personnes trans. « Un (sic) transfemme », vraiment ?

      Une statistique, incontestée par le GIDS et par les cliniques du genre nord-américaines, révèle qu’en l’absence d’une intervention d’ordre médical, environ 85 % des enfants dysphoriques de genre se réconcilient avec leur sexe biologique après la puberté. Comme l’indique le GIDS : « La persistance [à s’identifier comme trans] était fortement corrélée avec le début des interventions physiques, telles que le bloqueur hypothalamique. » De plus, la grande majorité de ces enfants non conformes reçus dans les cliniques — des filles qui préfèrent les cheveux courts et le skateboard, des garçons qui aiment les poupées Barbie — deviendront en grandissant des lesbiennes ou des gays. Dans le maelström de l’adolescence, se peut-il que ces jeunes confondent une attirance pour le même sexe avec l’idée d’être transgenre ?

      Les spécialistes en médecine clinique pensent que la cascade naturelle d’hormones sexuelles déclenchées à la puberté peut résoudre la haine de jeunes pour leur corps. Mais si la puberté est empêchée, cela ne peut se produire. De plus, l’affirmation selon laquelle les bloqueurs sont totalement réversibles, que la puberté naturelle démarrera simplement quand on cessera de les prendre, même des années plus tard, n’est pas vérifiée — en effet, presque personne ne vit cela.

      Le « protocole néerlandais » a été rapidement adopté par les cliniques du genre partout dans le monde, mais des médecins britanniques, qui ont respecté une approche dite d’« attente vigilante », sont restés prudent-e-s au début, refusant de prescrire des bloqueurs aux moins de 15 ans. Mais ces produits ont rapidement fait l’objet d’une revendication autant politique que médicale : des transactivistes ont soutenu que les refuser aux enfants équivalait à de la « transphobie ».

    • En 2011, le GIDS s’est lancé dans une étude portant sur 44 de leurs jeunes patient-e-s ; le Dr Michael Biggs, professeur agrégé au département de sociologie d’Oxford, a analysé les résultats de cette enquête, que le GIDS n’a publiés qu’au compte-gouttes. Il a notamment constaté que les enfants — bien que plus heureux et confiants au bout de six mois — ont constaté après un an « des problèmes internalisés et une insatisfaction corporelle, en particulier chez les enfats nées filles ». Le résultat le plus alarmant constaté était l’augmentation marquée du nombre de patient-e-s qui validaient la déclaration suivante : « J’essaie délibérément de me blesser ou de me tuer ». Étant donné que les parents se font constamment répéter (de facon tout à fait erronée) que leurs enfants se suicideront s’ils et elles ne prennent pas de bloqueurs, cette tendance nécessite certainement un examen plus approfondi.

    • C’est parfois les mêmes. Certaines femmes trans sont très proche du milieu proxénète et putiers et on fait comme si des violeurs ne pouvaient pas avoir la ruse de se faire passer pour leurs victimes afin de leur nuire encore plus. Les pédosexuels et pedocriminels prétendent souvent avoir l’esprit d’enfants, se sentir mieux en tant qu’enfant et Matzneff se prétend comme tel. Est-ce qu’un pedosexuel peut performer son age et faire changer son age sur ses papiers d’identité pour se rendre en adequation avec son ressenti d’agisme ?

    • Ce n’est pas pareil, ces personnes n’ont pas intérêt immédiat à ce que tel ou tel gosse devienne trans. (Alors que j’ai déjà vu un père sourd dire qu’il aurait été malheureux si son fils n’avait pas été sourd... Acceptable ? Pour lui ce n’est pas un handicap, c’est une culture.)

      Le front était bien trop large et se divise enfin, certain·es commencent à flairer que la cause trans se développe sur fond de LGBphobie, de conformisme de genre (si tu aimes les camions, tu es un garçon en vrai) et d’intérêts pharma qu’on aborde à peine. Ça fait quelque temps que j’attends que ça se déchire parce que pour des féministes non-trans il y a vraiment une grosse gêne : on dit que c’est la pire discrimination possible alors il faut être solidaire sans discernement. Et plein de femmes s’en prennent plein la gueule parce qu’elles osent penser comme elles le souhaitent, d’autres se sentent en incapacité de penser ces questions avec leurs outils et attendent que des trans leur disent quoi penser. Le jour où elles comprendront qu’il y a des intérêts et des valeurs très diverses, elles reprendront leur liberté de penser. Mais pas encore ! En tout cas ne soyons pas aussi bêtes qu’on nous le propose : il n’y a pas de « parapluie trans », il y a des groupes très divers. Donc certains sont flippants.

  • Third of Poland now declared ‘LGBT-free zone’, making intolerance official

    https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/02/25/third-of-poland-lgbt-free-zone-atlas-of-hate-homophobia

    A third of Poland has declared itself to be an official “LGBT-free” zone as local municipalities sign a pledge adopting resolutions against “#LGBT propaganda”.

    #violence #haine #homophobie #pologne #populisme #ultra-nationalisme #cartographie #cartoexperiment

  • Diffuser légalement de la musique sur Fortnite peut amener à être banni... de YouTube - Tech - Numerama
    https://www.numerama.com/tech/607165-diffuser-legalement-de-la-musique-sur-fortnite-peut-amener-a-etre-b

    Entre Justin Bieber, Fortnite et les crèmes glacés, le Copyright Madness de la semaine est clairement en plein délire. Copyright Madness Au voleur. L’industrie musicale nous a habitués à des dérives à répétitions. Nous avons déjà épinglé dans le Copyright Madness des accusations de plagiat capilotractées pour un sample de quelques secondes. Mais on peut vraisemblablement aller encore plus loin dans les abysses de la propriété intellectuelle. Le chanteur Justin Bieber a récemment sorti un nouvel album. (...)

    #Google #LG #GoogleSearch #YouTube #jeu #bot #copyright

    //c0.lestechnophiles.com/www.numerama.com/content/uploads/2020/02/fortnite-saison-2-3.jpg