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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHere's how Trump-Pence policy is already affecting LGBT lives in Chechnya
By Samar Habib May 16 at 6:00 AM
During the Obama administration, Mike Pence then governor of Indiana opposed the U.S. governments effort to protect LGBT rights nationally and internationally. He argued that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people should not be recognized as a legitimate minority group separate from the rest of the population.
It would seem that Vice President Pence is slowly getting his wish.
In March, U.S. newspapers reported that LGBT people would no longer be counted in the 2020 Census. De-identifying LGBTs can be a step toward making collective organizing impossible and enabling persecution. Chechnyas alleged LGBT cleansing campaign shows us how denying a groups existence can make it easier to persecute its members.
Last month, scant reports about a torture camp for gay men in Chechnya began to surface. A Chechen official has denied these reports, claiming that gays (as they are understood ontologically in the West) do not exist in Chechnya. Something similar happened in Iran when, in 2007, then-President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad similarly claimed that there were no gay people in Iran and therefore the government couldnt be persecuting them. The argument is simple. Gays and their communities do not exist in Chechnya. Therefore, the region cannot be persecuting people who do not exist. As long as homosexuals are officially nonexistent, then so is the persecution.
The U.S. administration remained silent about these reports a sharp change from the governments strong defense of LGBT lives under the Obama administration. In September 2016, the United Nations Human Rights Council broke ground when it appointed an independent monitor of LGBT persecution, a decision prompted " target="_blank">by U.S. diplomatic pressure to have LGBT rights recognized under the international rubric of human rights. But under President Trump and Pence, we no longer live in that world. Russia, the Organization of Islamic Conference and the U.S. administration agree however implicitly that the normalization of gay life must come to an end. Chechnya and other countries have realized that they no longer need fear a U.S.-backed response, diplomatic or otherwise, for scapegoating, criminalizing, arresting or imprisoning homosexuals.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2017/05/16/heres-how-trumppence-policy-is-already-affecting-lgbt-lives-in-chechnya/?utm_term=.5556de01d8c5&wpisrc=nl_politics&wpmm=1