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Rasan (organization)

Rasan (Kurdish: ڕاسان; English: /rɑːsɑːn/; lit.'uprising') is a Kurdish non-governmental human rights organization that was established in 2004 in Sulaymaniyah, Kurdistan Region, Iraq. Rasan focuses on LGBT rights and women's rights. The organization runs projects that focus on coexistence and social cohesion through the use of arts, social awareness, focus groups, livelihood projects, seminars, workshops, training, and action plans. Rasan engages community leaders from different sectors in community forums on gender identity, equality and coexistence.[18]

Rasan
ڕاسان
The logo, shaped like the letter R, represents women (with the female gender symbol present) as well as the LGBT community (with the rainbow colors.)
Pronunciation
Formation2004 (2004)
Founded atSulaymaniyah, Kurdistan Region[1]
TypeNGO
PurposeHumanitarian
HeadquartersSulaymaniyah, Kurdistan, Iraq
ServicesPsychosocial support
Legal aid
Consultation[2][3]
FieldsHuman rights[4][5][6][7]
(Women and LGBT)
Official languages
Kurdish
English
Executive Director
Tanya Darwesh[8][9][10]
Media & Communications Officer
Zhiar Ali (2019–2021)
AffiliationsCOC Nederland
Kvinna Till Kvinna[11][12][13][14]
All Out[15][16]
Give A Damn[3]
Oxfam
PlanetRomeo[17]
USAID
Staff (2019)
12
Websiterasanorg.com

Initially, Rasan was a feminist women's rights organization between 2004 and 2012 but in 2012 they expanded their scope to human rights issues related to the LGBT community, making them the first registered organization in Iraq to publicly advocate for the LGBT community. The organization also campaigns against child marriage and domestic abuse. The organization is headquartered in Sulaymaniyah, which is their primary area of operation, but they campaign in Iraq and the wider Middle East using their media presence and social media platforms, pressuring the Iraqi government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to acknowledge basic human rights which are still violated and establish laws to protect LGBT people and women.

The organization started awareness campaigns and group workshops for young people in Kurdish society to try to uproot the taboo of LGBT acceptance and the way LGBT communities are viewed and vilified by most of society. One of the campaigns, known as Art for All, included painting murals on public walls depicting the concerns of the LGBT community in Kurdistan in an attempt to sway public opinion towards a more lenient mentality. The project started in 2017 after a fundraising campaign by All Out. By the end of the project, some of the murals representing the LGBT community were vandalized, especially ones with rainbows, which are known as an LGBT symbol. They also launched the Give a Hand project during the same time, supported by Give a Damn, which was about researching the needs of the LGBT community and create new queer-friendly vocabulary.

Rasan was supported by multiple partners to execute their projects, including COC Nederland, Kvinna Till Kvinna, All Out, Give A Damn, Oxfam, PlanetRomeo, USAID, and Asiacell.

History

Early days

Rasan was founded in 2004 as a feminist and women's rights organization.[19][20][21] After shutting down for a year in 2011, it reopened in 2012.[21] While continuing its work for women's rights, Rasan decided to also focus on the LGBT community, which was one of the biggest groups in society that still faced violence and discrimination.[22][23] According to Ayaz Shalal Kado, former deputy director of Rasan, they felt something was missing and left out.[2] Rasan was the only registered organization in Iraq to work for the LGBT community. [a]

2005–2012

In 2005, a constitutional awareness project for women was held in Erbil, which was hosted around many districts of the region. The project was supported by Iraq Civil Society and Independent Media Support Program (ICSP) for two months. Later in 2005, 35 lectures were held over three months on topics including social and political issues, and women's health. This project was also supported by ICSP.[29] Between 2006 and 2010, the organization published 85 press releases but stopped publishing after 2010. They also published a book titled "Women at Third World", which is about violence and harassment against women. The organization also hosted television shows covering violence against women, gender equality, and human and civil rights.[30]

In 2007, Rasan produced a film about female genital mutilation. The production was supported by Human Rights Watch and was displayed in Erbil, Duhok, Kirkuk, Ranya, and Said Sadiq. The film entered a competition for Best Films by the Ministry of Human Rights in the Kurdistan region, and was nominated for display in Germany. In 2008, the organization worked on 55 cases, in 2009 on 62 cases, and in 2010 on 60 cases, which were mainly about social, political, ideological, or family problems faced by women.[31] The organization hosted activities from 2007–2012, including the World Conference of NGOs in Washington, D.C., EU Conference of NGOs in Austria, KTK Workshops in Amman, KTK Workshops in Lebanon, Summit of Social Entrepreneurs in Istanbul, and Summit of Women Rights Defenders in South Africa. Rasan then took a short hiatus and resumed its work after adding LGBT issues to its focus.[32]

2012–2018

Rasan started planning a project that included activism and advocacy for the LGBT community in 2012.[23][2] COC funded the project as part of their Pride Program. The project was called "Crossing Iraqi Rainbow"[33] and ran from 2016 until the end of 2020. The objectives of the project varied by year. Rasan was able to hold workshops, training, seminars, group discussions and community forums. The participants of the workshops were mainly from governmental sectors and institutions, the Ministry of Health, Asayish, police, Ministry of Endowments and Religious Affairs,[3] youth, and university students.[34]

in 2016, Rasan executed a series of large-scale projects, one of which was 16 Days of Activism, where the organization started spreading anti-child-marriage posters around Sulaymaniyah and painting artwork reflecting gender equality, peace, women's rights, and coexistence.[35] Another project, We Care About You, which was executed from July to September 2016, aimed to provide protection and assistance for female refugees, Internally displaced persons, and host communities. The project concluded with 60 women having direct access to education, 750 women receiving training on gender-based violence (GBV); community forms of 50% female and 50% male were established to received support to develop and implement community GBV action plans for 1,500 indirect beneficiaries.[36] As part of the Women Can Be project, Rasan provided direct psychosocial and legal support to 200 women, 1,200 women received hygienic kits, and 50 seminars were hosted for men to raise awareness about healthy relationships and gender equality.[37][38][39]

On March 1, 2017, Rasan announced its 1325 project. Four hundred cases were provided with direct legal, psychosocial and social support. Rasan also hosted 80 awareness seminars to 1,000 women.[40] In 2019, Rasan hosted 11 seminars for 250 women from Chamchamal, Kalar, Arbat Camp, and Khabat Districts.[41]

Another Rasan campaign involved working with 90 women who were either freed by or had fled from ISIS rapists and human traffickers. Rasan worked with women who were abused by ISIS militias. According to sources, Rasan is trying to procure more backing from international organizations to help more people, especially women and children who have fled ISIS and require mental and physical therapy.[42]

Art for All

 
A mural representing gender equality which was vandalized and then fixed by Rasan as a countermeasure

In 2017, Rasan launched a campaign called "Art for All" to paint murals around the city of Sulaymaniyah; it was their first public advocacy for the LGBT community.[42][43][44] The project was funded from a fundraising campaign supported by All Out.[15][16][45] Some of the murals, which represented the LGBT community, were defaced with black paint[26][21] but Rasan repainted them.[46] Although the authorities, fearing a backlash from locals and religious believers with strong opinions, did not allow Rasan to paint all of their murals on public main roads.[20] Rasan also painted murals on high-school walls[47][35][48] and The American University of Iraq, Sulaimani. Although the murals were not on public roads, there was an aggressive backlash against Rasan for their advocacy.[49] Rasan received many negative reactions, including messages containing excessive profanity and death threats from individuals who believed Rasan was trying to spread indecency and immorality,[42][20] and some of the organization's staff have been assaulted in public.[25] The project was also challenged heavily by governmental institutions, with authorities threatening the project manager with arrest.[21] This project ended on November 16, 2018.[45]

Give a Hand

In 2018, Rasan was financially backed by the Give A Damn organization for the "Give a Hand" project to research the needs and challenges of the local LGBT community. The project aimed to help the organization devise a plan to meet the community's needs and to develop new LGBT-related words in the Sorani language to expand the community's vocabulary. According to Give A Damn, "the support [was] also used to work on community-building and to identify allies such as imams, police officers, and policymakers."[3]

2018–Present

Former deputy director of Rasan, Kado, talked to SBS Kurdish about the organization's work and the way they work to break social taboos, educate the community, and help women and the LGBT community with their struggles. Shalal told SBS Kurdish Rasan is one of a very few organizations working for LGBT people in the Kurdistan region, and in Iraq as a whole. "We have case management services, where LGBT individuals can visit our organization or can connect with us on different applications through their phones, or on Facebook, or on Twitter, or by email to ask for physiological, social, and legal services that Rasan provides".[2] Despite the economic and political crisis in the Kurdistan region, Rasan continued its advocacy campaigns. Kado said if they had more support, they would expand their activities into other parts of the region, including Kirkuk.[2]

In 2020, Rasan launched a Youth Development Project, which includes six days of training about human rights, gender and sexuality, and Sexual and reproductive health and rights. The participants were asked to become volunteers for the organization.[50]

Response to COVID-19

in Iraq, where there are no laws protecting LGBT communities, conservative groups and religious militants are currently the main threat to the LGBT people's lives. The spread of COVID-19 has seen a rise in the religious leaders' anti-LGBT speeches and further danger to the lives of LGBT people, especially in countries where ideological groups such as the Shi'ite, which have militias.[51] There has been instances where influential figures in Iraq blamed the spread of COVID-19 on LGBT people.[52]

On May 17, 2020, the European Union (EU), British, and Canadian embassies raised the pride flag in their Baghdad headquarters, which caused a massive backlash,[53][54][55][56][57] forcing the EU embassy to take down the flag after a few hours.[58] Muqtada al-Sadir had earlier called for an end to violence against members of the LGBT community; according to a report written by Zhiar Ali for Rasan, he was one of the most influential people to start a hate campaign against the community, declaring homosexuality a "paraphilia" and comparing it to incest.[59] Iraqi politicians soon started an unsuccessful campaign to expel the EU embassy out of Iraq.[52]

"Muqtada al-Sadir is clearly calling on the public and summoning everyone to take action to stop the "spread" of homosexuality. This has caused the public to feel further outraged by the situation and have resorted to violence against LGBT people and a crackdown has begun to find them and murder them. However, this has not been the only call to start a hate campaign. On a broadcasted footage to national TV, a group of people is walking over LGBT flags and condemning the community and proclaim as though they are abnormal or homosexuality is some sort of disease." –Rasan[59]

According to Ali, since Muqtada al-Sadir posted discriminatory tweets, a number of LGBT youth have been killed in a hate campaign. Ali reported the appearance of "digital jihadists" who pose as LGBQT people online to out real members of the community, making them vulnerable targets of murder attempts and harm. The group would search on gay-dating apps such as Grindr, and check the followers of local pro-LGBT groups and persuade them reveal their identities.[59] After these events unfolded, Rasan started aggressively targeting the EU and UN on their social media accounts, letting the public know that they were not supported by them in fear that it would damage their reputation, labeling them as "opportunistic tokenists". Rasan also led a media campaign against the Iraqi government for not taking action and criticized Muqtada al-Sadir for his discrimination against LGBT people. In an interview with Rudaw, Rasan said; "as usual, Iraqi politicians continue fooling their nation and escaping responsibility. It is embarrassing and surprising for a figure like Muqtada al-Sadr to be unaware of what is going on and rather blame a marginalized group of society for being the source of COVID-19."[51]

Legal challenges

 
A petition hosted on Change.org asking the government to "allow local organizations to continue advocating for LGBT+ rights."

Iraq has no laws to help or provide legal protection for LGBT individuals,[60] despite continuous attacks on the LGBT community. The lack of condemnation by the media or public figures does not help the escalating situations in the Iraqi region. There are still problems with self-expression for to LGBT people, whose freedoms are restricted. Ambiguous articles in the Iraqi Penal Code, such as articles 393, 394, 400, and 401 in the Kurdistan region, and articles 376, 394, 398, 397, 402, 403, 502 in Iraq are abused to detain LGBT people in the region.[61]

Legally, sexual relations, whether homosexual or heterosexual, are not criminalized, but there are numerous reports about executions and floggings carried out in places controlled by militias and religious militants.[62][61] Since the Kurdistan region has autonomy status, they have adopted their own laws which do not criminalize same-sex relations, but some LGBT people are arrested regardless.[b]

On February 22, 2021, it was announced that a lawsuit was filed against Rasan by an MP of an Islamist political fraction called Komal (Kurdistan Justice Group) locally because the organization advocated for LGBT+ rights locally, and according to him, this was a "against the values of the Kurdish culture."[64][65][66] In response to his accusations, Rasan said they will be defending themselves against the lawsuit in court, and that they work for all humanity. Zhiar Ali, former media officer at Rasan, spoke up against the MP during a live interview with Rudaw, defending the LGBT+ community, saying that the comments of the MP were "baseless and not based on any scientific evidence."[67] As a response to the threats that the organization will be closed down, Ali started a change.org petition through his initiative Yeksani which was signed by over 1,000 people, including national and local activists.[68]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Besides Rasan, the only other organization publicly working for LGBT rights is called IraQueer, which was found in 2015 and is not yet registered in Iraq.[24] Rasan is still registered as a women's rights organization, according to the Directorate of Non-Governmental Organizations in the Kurdistan Region, because registering as an LGBT organization is not allowed.[3] According to the Austrian Centre for Country of Origin and Asylum Research and other parties, the region in which Rasan operates is safer and more tolerable to LGBT people than the rest of Iraq.[25][3] Other registered organizations outside of the Kurdistan Region, such as in the south of Iraq in Baghdad, have a more difficult time working for LGBT rights and are often targeted.[22] This claim is disputed and some parties say the Kurdistan Region is equally as hostile towards members of the LGBT community.[26] According to a report by UNHCR, Kurdish society still has tribal values and believes in gender roles and family honor, which restricts the freedom of LGBT people in the area.[27] In Baghdad, LGBT people have been targets of killing squads using dating apps. In 2009, human rights activists estimated 680 LGBT people were murdered during a five-year period, at a rate of about a dozen per month.[28]
  2. ^ According to the Kurdish Penal Code on sexual misconduct, in case the sexual relation did not violate any of the following 6 conditions, the sexual relation is legal:
    1. Mutual consent must be present;
    2. Involved individuals should not be married;
    3. Both parties must be at least 18 years old;
    4. The act should not be in a public place where it can be witnessed;
    5. There should not be any promises of marriage before the act; and
    6. The sex should be done outside of prostitution and free of charge.[63]

References

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External links

  • Official website

rasan, organization, rasan, organization, redirects, here, other, uses, rasan, rasan, kurdish, ڕاسان, english, ɑː, ɑː, uprising, kurdish, governmental, human, rights, organization, that, established, 2004, sulaymaniyah, kurdistan, region, iraq, rasan, focuses,. Rasan Organization redirects here For other uses see Rasan Rasan Kurdish ڕاسان English r ɑː s ɑː n lit uprising is a Kurdish non governmental human rights organization that was established in 2004 in Sulaymaniyah Kurdistan Region Iraq Rasan focuses on LGBT rights and women s rights The organization runs projects that focus on coexistence and social cohesion through the use of arts social awareness focus groups livelihood projects seminars workshops training and action plans Rasan engages community leaders from different sectors in community forums on gender identity equality and coexistence 18 RasanڕاسانThe logo shaped like the letter R represents women with the female gender symbol present as well as the LGBT community with the rainbow colors PronunciationIPA ɾɑːsɑːn rah sanFormation2004 2004 Founded atSulaymaniyah Kurdistan Region 1 TypeNGOPurposeHumanitarianHeadquartersSulaymaniyah Kurdistan IraqServicesPsychosocial supportLegal aidConsultation 2 3 FieldsHuman rights 4 5 6 7 Women and LGBT Official languagesKurdishEnglishExecutive DirectorTanya Darwesh 8 9 10 Media amp Communications OfficerZhiar Ali 2019 2021 AffiliationsCOC NederlandKvinna Till Kvinna 11 12 13 14 All Out 15 16 Give A Damn 3 OxfamPlanetRomeo 17 USAIDStaff 2019 12Websiterasanorg wbr comInitially Rasan was a feminist women s rights organization between 2004 and 2012 but in 2012 they expanded their scope to human rights issues related to the LGBT community making them the first registered organization in Iraq to publicly advocate for the LGBT community The organization also campaigns against child marriage and domestic abuse The organization is headquartered in Sulaymaniyah which is their primary area of operation but they campaign in Iraq and the wider Middle East using their media presence and social media platforms pressuring the Iraqi government and the Kurdistan Regional Government KRG to acknowledge basic human rights which are still violated and establish laws to protect LGBT people and women The organization started awareness campaigns and group workshops for young people in Kurdish society to try to uproot the taboo of LGBT acceptance and the way LGBT communities are viewed and vilified by most of society One of the campaigns known as Art for All included painting murals on public walls depicting the concerns of the LGBT community in Kurdistan in an attempt to sway public opinion towards a more lenient mentality The project started in 2017 after a fundraising campaign by All Out By the end of the project some of the murals representing the LGBT community were vandalized especially ones with rainbows which are known as an LGBT symbol They also launched the Give a Hand project during the same time supported by Give a Damn which was about researching the needs of the LGBT community and create new queer friendly vocabulary Rasan was supported by multiple partners to execute their projects including COC Nederland Kvinna Till Kvinna All Out Give A Damn Oxfam PlanetRomeo USAID and Asiacell Contents 1 History 1 1 Early days 1 2 2005 2012 1 3 2012 2018 1 3 1 Art for All 1 3 2 Give a Hand 1 4 2018 Present 1 4 1 Response to COVID 19 2 Legal challenges 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditEarly days Edit Rasan was founded in 2004 as a feminist and women s rights organization 19 20 21 After shutting down for a year in 2011 it reopened in 2012 21 While continuing its work for women s rights Rasan decided to also focus on the LGBT community which was one of the biggest groups in society that still faced violence and discrimination 22 23 According to Ayaz Shalal Kado former deputy director of Rasan they felt something was missing and left out 2 Rasan was the only registered organization in Iraq to work for the LGBT community a 2005 2012 Edit In 2005 a constitutional awareness project for women was held in Erbil which was hosted around many districts of the region The project was supported by Iraq Civil Society and Independent Media Support Program ICSP for two months Later in 2005 35 lectures were held over three months on topics including social and political issues and women s health This project was also supported by ICSP 29 Between 2006 and 2010 the organization published 85 press releases but stopped publishing after 2010 They also published a book titled Women at Third World which is about violence and harassment against women The organization also hosted television shows covering violence against women gender equality and human and civil rights 30 In 2007 Rasan produced a film about female genital mutilation The production was supported by Human Rights Watch and was displayed in Erbil Duhok Kirkuk Ranya and Said Sadiq The film entered a competition for Best Films by the Ministry of Human Rights in the Kurdistan region and was nominated for display in Germany In 2008 the organization worked on 55 cases in 2009 on 62 cases and in 2010 on 60 cases which were mainly about social political ideological or family problems faced by women 31 The organization hosted activities from 2007 2012 including the World Conference of NGOs in Washington D C EU Conference of NGOs in Austria KTK Workshops in Amman KTK Workshops in Lebanon Summit of Social Entrepreneurs in Istanbul and Summit of Women Rights Defenders in South Africa Rasan then took a short hiatus and resumed its work after adding LGBT issues to its focus 32 2012 2018 Edit Rasan started planning a project that included activism and advocacy for the LGBT community in 2012 23 2 COC funded the project as part of their Pride Program The project was called Crossing Iraqi Rainbow 33 and ran from 2016 until the end of 2020 The objectives of the project varied by year Rasan was able to hold workshops training seminars group discussions and community forums The participants of the workshops were mainly from governmental sectors and institutions the Ministry of Health Asayish police Ministry of Endowments and Religious Affairs 3 youth and university students 34 in 2016 Rasan executed a series of large scale projects one of which was 16 Days of Activism where the organization started spreading anti child marriage posters around Sulaymaniyah and painting artwork reflecting gender equality peace women s rights and coexistence 35 Another project We Care About You which was executed from July to September 2016 aimed to provide protection and assistance for female refugees Internally displaced persons and host communities The project concluded with 60 women having direct access to education 750 women receiving training on gender based violence GBV community forms of 50 female and 50 male were established to received support to develop and implement community GBV action plans for 1 500 indirect beneficiaries 36 As part of the Women Can Be project Rasan provided direct psychosocial and legal support to 200 women 1 200 women received hygienic kits and 50 seminars were hosted for men to raise awareness about healthy relationships and gender equality 37 38 39 On March 1 2017 Rasan announced its 1325 project Four hundred cases were provided with direct legal psychosocial and social support Rasan also hosted 80 awareness seminars to 1 000 women 40 In 2019 Rasan hosted 11 seminars for 250 women from Chamchamal Kalar Arbat Camp and Khabat Districts 41 Another Rasan campaign involved working with 90 women who were either freed by or had fled from ISIS rapists and human traffickers Rasan worked with women who were abused by ISIS militias According to sources Rasan is trying to procure more backing from international organizations to help more people especially women and children who have fled ISIS and require mental and physical therapy 42 Art for All Edit A mural representing gender equality which was vandalized and then fixed by Rasan as a countermeasure In 2017 Rasan launched a campaign called Art for All to paint murals around the city of Sulaymaniyah it was their first public advocacy for the LGBT community 42 43 44 The project was funded from a fundraising campaign supported by All Out 15 16 45 Some of the murals which represented the LGBT community were defaced with black paint 26 21 but Rasan repainted them 46 Although the authorities fearing a backlash from locals and religious believers with strong opinions did not allow Rasan to paint all of their murals on public main roads 20 Rasan also painted murals on high school walls 47 35 48 and The American University of Iraq Sulaimani Although the murals were not on public roads there was an aggressive backlash against Rasan for their advocacy 49 Rasan received many negative reactions including messages containing excessive profanity and death threats from individuals who believed Rasan was trying to spread indecency and immorality 42 20 and some of the organization s staff have been assaulted in public 25 The project was also challenged heavily by governmental institutions with authorities threatening the project manager with arrest 21 This project ended on November 16 2018 45 Give a Hand Edit In 2018 Rasan was financially backed by the Give A Damn organization for the Give a Hand project to research the needs and challenges of the local LGBT community The project aimed to help the organization devise a plan to meet the community s needs and to develop new LGBT related words in the Sorani language to expand the community s vocabulary According to Give A Damn the support was also used to work on community building and to identify allies such as imams police officers and policymakers 3 2018 Present Edit Former deputy director of Rasan Kado talked to SBS Kurdish about the organization s work and the way they work to break social taboos educate the community and help women and the LGBT community with their struggles Shalal told SBS Kurdish Rasan is one of a very few organizations working for LGBT people in the Kurdistan region and in Iraq as a whole We have case management services where LGBT individuals can visit our organization or can connect with us on different applications through their phones or on Facebook or on Twitter or by email to ask for physiological social and legal services that Rasan provides 2 Despite the economic and political crisis in the Kurdistan region Rasan continued its advocacy campaigns Kado said if they had more support they would expand their activities into other parts of the region including Kirkuk 2 In 2020 Rasan launched a Youth Development Project which includes six days of training about human rights gender and sexuality and Sexual and reproductive health and rights The participants were asked to become volunteers for the organization 50 Response to COVID 19 Edit in Iraq where there are no laws protecting LGBT communities conservative groups and religious militants are currently the main threat to the LGBT people s lives The spread of COVID 19 has seen a rise in the religious leaders anti LGBT speeches and further danger to the lives of LGBT people especially in countries where ideological groups such as the Shi ite which have militias 51 There has been instances where influential figures in Iraq blamed the spread of COVID 19 on LGBT people 52 On May 17 2020 the European Union EU British and Canadian embassies raised the pride flag in their Baghdad headquarters which caused a massive backlash 53 54 55 56 57 forcing the EU embassy to take down the flag after a few hours 58 Muqtada al Sadir had earlier called for an end to violence against members of the LGBT community according to a report written by Zhiar Ali for Rasan he was one of the most influential people to start a hate campaign against the community declaring homosexuality a paraphilia and comparing it to incest 59 Iraqi politicians soon started an unsuccessful campaign to expel the EU embassy out of Iraq 52 Muqtada al Sadir is clearly calling on the public and summoning everyone to take action to stop the spread of homosexuality This has caused the public to feel further outraged by the situation and have resorted to violence against LGBT people and a crackdown has begun to find them and murder them However this has not been the only call to start a hate campaign On a broadcasted footage to national TV a group of people is walking over LGBT flags and condemning the community and proclaim as though they are abnormal or homosexuality is some sort of disease Rasan 59 According to Ali since Muqtada al Sadir posted discriminatory tweets a number of LGBT youth have been killed in a hate campaign Ali reported the appearance of digital jihadists who pose as LGBQT people online to out real members of the community making them vulnerable targets of murder attempts and harm The group would search on gay dating apps such as Grindr and check the followers of local pro LGBT groups and persuade them reveal their identities 59 After these events unfolded Rasan started aggressively targeting the EU and UN on their social media accounts letting the public know that they were not supported by them in fear that it would damage their reputation labeling them as opportunistic tokenists Rasan also led a media campaign against the Iraqi government for not taking action and criticized Muqtada al Sadir for his discrimination against LGBT people In an interview with Rudaw Rasan said as usual Iraqi politicians continue fooling their nation and escaping responsibility It is embarrassing and surprising for a figure like Muqtada al Sadr to be unaware of what is going on and rather blame a marginalized group of society for being the source of COVID 19 51 Legal challenges EditSee also LGBT activism in Iraq A petition hosted on Change org asking the government to allow local organizations to continue advocating for LGBT rights Iraq has no laws to help or provide legal protection for LGBT individuals 60 despite continuous attacks on the LGBT community The lack of condemnation by the media or public figures does not help the escalating situations in the Iraqi region There are still problems with self expression for to LGBT people whose freedoms are restricted Ambiguous articles in the Iraqi Penal Code such as articles 393 394 400 and 401 in the Kurdistan region and articles 376 394 398 397 402 403 502 in Iraq are abused to detain LGBT people in the region 61 Legally sexual relations whether homosexual or heterosexual are not criminalized but there are numerous reports about executions and floggings carried out in places controlled by militias and religious militants 62 61 Since the Kurdistan region has autonomy status they have adopted their own laws which do not criminalize same sex relations but some LGBT people are arrested regardless b On February 22 2021 it was announced that a lawsuit was filed against Rasan by an MP of an Islamist political fraction called Komal Kurdistan Justice Group locally because the organization advocated for LGBT rights locally and according to him this was a against the values of the Kurdish culture 64 65 66 In response to his accusations Rasan said they will be defending themselves against the lawsuit in court and that they work for all humanity Zhiar Ali former media officer at Rasan spoke up against the MP during a live interview with Rudaw defending the LGBT community saying that the comments of the MP were baseless and not based on any scientific evidence 67 As a response to the threats that the organization will be closed down Ali started a change org petition through his initiative Yeksani which was signed by over 1 000 people including national and local activists 68 See also EditZhiar Ali Human rights in Kurdistan Region Human rights in Muslim majority countries Human rights in post invasion Iraq Sexual taboo in the Middle East LGBT in Islam LGBT rights in Iraq LGBT rights in the Middle EastNotes Edit Besides Rasan the only other organization publicly working for LGBT rights is called IraQueer which was found in 2015 and is not yet registered in Iraq 24 Rasan is still registered as a women s rights organization according to the Directorate of Non Governmental Organizations in the Kurdistan Region because registering as an LGBT organization is not allowed 3 According to the Austrian Centre for Country of Origin and Asylum Research and other parties the region in which Rasan operates is safer and more tolerable to LGBT people than the rest of Iraq 25 3 Other registered organizations outside of the Kurdistan Region such as in the south of Iraq in Baghdad have a more difficult time working for LGBT rights and are often targeted 22 This claim is disputed and some parties say the Kurdistan Region is equally as hostile towards members of the LGBT community 26 According to a report by UNHCR Kurdish society still has tribal values and believes in gender roles and family honor which restricts the freedom of LGBT people in the area 27 In Baghdad LGBT people have been targets of killing squads using dating apps In 2009 human rights activists estimated 680 LGBT people were murdered during a five year period at a rate of about a dozen per month 28 According to the Kurdish Penal Code on sexual misconduct in case the sexual relation did not violate any of the following 6 conditions the sexual relation is legal Mutual consent must be present Involved individuals should not be married Both parties must be at least 18 years old The act should not be in a public place where it can be witnessed There should not be any promises of marriage before the act and The sex should be done outside of prostitution and free of charge 63 References Edit Event on LGBT equality in Iraq Queer Stagiaires September 8 2017 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 a b c d e Rasan Organisation leads the Kurdish fight to break LGBT taboo SBS Kurdish Archived from the original on October 19 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 a b c d e f A safe space for LGBTI s in Iraq Give A Damn Archived from the original on November 1 2019 Retrieved October 7 2020 Amien Ava We Can t Just Run Meet Iraq s University Students Working For a Better Future www gradtouch com Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 MENARA Final Reports PDF Menara Project March 2019 p 28 Archived PDF from the original on October 2 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Rasan Organization a women s rights organization also formally took on LGBT rights in 2012 HRW Facing the Myths LGBT Voices from the Middle East and North Africa www hrw org Archived from the original on September 18 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 A F E A F E Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 چالاکانی مەدەنی توندوتیژی دژی ژنان لەماوەی کەرەنتینەدا زیادیکردووە NRT News Archived from the original on June 16 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 کەمتر لە چوار خوولەک ژیانی کچان و ژنان دەخرێتەڕوو www wishe net Archived from the original on October 10 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 له ١٢ ی ژنانی كورد له لایه ن كه س و كاریانه وه ده ستدرێژی سێكسییان ده كرێته سه ر qadirzada com in Kurdish Retrieved October 8 2020 Iraq Kvinna Till Kvinna Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Kvinna Till Kvinna i Irak Kvinna Till Kvinna Archived from the original on October 10 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Yazidiska kvinnor far hjalp efter IS overgrepp Kvinna Till Kvinna Archived from the original on September 18 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 لە سلێمانی شەقامەکان دەڕازێنرێتەوە www araste co in Kurdish Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 a b Help make history in Iraq All Out Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 a b Spreading a message of love with murals in Iraq All Out All Out Archived from the original on October 12 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 PlanetRomeo Foundation www facebook com Retrieved November 3 2020 Civil Society Dialogue Network Discussion Paper No 12 Civil society peacebuilding actors in Iraq PDF polo org p 7 Archived PDF from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 The world is changing Iraqi LGBT group takes campaign to streets Middle East Eye Archived from the original on March 24 2019 Retrieved October 7 2020 a b c Liebe ist Liebe auch in Kurdistan l mag de mobil l mag de in German Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 a b c d Laamari Lyas January 25 2017 Sfregiati i murales pro minoranze in Kurdistan Il Grande Colibri in Italian Retrieved November 19 2020 a b Anfragebeantwortung zum Irak Lage von LGBT Personen Rechtliche Situation und staatlicher Schutz Diskriminierung und Vorfalle von Gewalt Behandlung durch Milizen Schutzunterkunfte LGBTI Aktivismus a 10587 www ecoi net in German Austrian Centre for Country of Origin and Asylum Research and May 30 2018 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 a b AUDACITY IN ADVERSITY LGBT Activism in the Middle East and North Africa PDF Dataspace Human Rights Watch Archived PDF from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 About IraQueer Archived from the original on August 12 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 a b Ricard Lauren March 4 2020 Fighting for LGBT rights in Iraq Medium Retrieved October 8 2020 a b IRAQI KURDISTAN We stand side by side CPT speaks with the LGBT community Christian Peacemaker Teams www cpt org Archived from the original on October 12 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 International Protection Considerations with Regard to People Fleeing the Republic of Iraq PDF p 103 Archived PDF from the original on August 13 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 D Zach June 26 2017 In ISIS Shadow LGBT Kurds Take A Stand HuffPost Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Project Department Rasan Organization June 21 2018 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Media Department Rasan Organization June 21 2018 Archived from the original on October 9 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Society Department Rasan Organization June 21 2018 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 National Awareness amp International Participation Rasan Organization June 21 2018 Archived from the original on October 10 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Crossing Iraqi Rainbow Rasan Organization June 20 2018 Archived from the original on October 11 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Rasan s workshop at the American University of Iraq Sulaimani about LGBT Rasan Organization November 13 2019 Archived from the original on August 9 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 a b 16 Days of Activism 2016 Rasan Organization June 16 2018 Archived from the original on August 9 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 We Care About You Rasan Organization June 21 2018 Archived from the original on October 9 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 شينويذ سارة رعاية الذكور والـ إل جي بي تي آي الناجين من العنف الجنسي تعلم الدروس من المنظمات المحلية Forced Migration Review fmreview org in Arabic Archived from the original on October 9 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Chynoweth Sarah Caring for male and LGBTI sexual violence survivors learning from local organisations PDF fmreviews org Archived PDF from the original on April 25 2018 Retrieved October 8 2020 Women Can Be Rasan Organization June 21 2018 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 1325 in KRI Rasan Organization June 20 2018 Archived from the original on October 11 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Strong Women In Chamchamal Kalar Kalakn Garmian Arbat Camp Xabat Charmo University and Sulaimanyah City Rasan Organization August 27 2019 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 a b c Kurdish group launches pro LGBT human rights campaign Washington Blade Gay News Politics LGBT Rights January 3 2017 Archived from the original on October 9 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Montgomery Peter January 8 2017 Anti Gay Anti Catholic Evangelical Sworn In As Mayor of Rio More in Global LGBT Recap Religion Dispatches Archived from the original on June 21 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Tatchell Peter February 20 2017 There are reasons to be cheerful LGBTI rights gains in unlikely countries Peter Tatchell The Guardian Archived from the original on October 9 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 a b بەوێنە لەسلێمانی پڕۆژەیەکی ھونەری سازدەکرێت nhanews net Retrieved October 8 2020 ڕاسان بە هونەر وەڵامی ئەو کەسانە دەداتەوە کە کارەکانی تێکدەدەن کوردی RojNews News in Kurdish February 26 2020 Archived from the original on October 11 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 Courage and Determination Equal Eyes Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Rasan Organization Rasan Organization Archived from the original on October 24 2020 Retrieved October 7 2020 A Rainbow in Stormy Skies LGBT Writing in the northern Middle East Asian and African studies blog blogs bl uk Archived from the original on October 11 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Rasan launches a Volunteer Development Initiative Rasan Organization May 15 2020 Retrieved March 23 2021 a b Mosimann Yasmine Shiite cleric Sadr says same sex marriage caused coronavirus pandemic Rudaw Media Network Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved October 20 2020 a b Iraqi politicians call for expulsions after embassies fly LGBT flag Middle East Eye Retrieved November 19 2020 Iraq Condemns EU Mission for Displaying LGBT Flag Asharq AL awsat Archived from the original on August 11 2020 Retrieved October 20 2020 Iraqi leaders condemn western diplomats for hoisting LGBT pride flags Rudaw Media Network Archived from the original on September 20 2020 Retrieved October 20 2020 EU mission s raising of rainbow flag sparks outcry in Iraq Qantara de Dialogue with the Islamic World Archived from the original on May 30 2020 Retrieved October 20 2020 Gay flag raised in the capital Baghdad Gay flag raised in the capital Baghdad Retrieved October 20 2020 Iraqi leaders Sadr and Amiri bash gay pride flag raising ceremony The Jerusalem Post JPost com Archived from the original on October 14 2020 Retrieved October 20 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on February 24 2021 Retrieved March 1 2021 پەرلەمانتارێک گروپ و كه سانێك خۆیان مه ڵاس داوه بۆ دزینی ره وشت و به ها باڵاكانی كۆمه ڵگه in Kurdish Retrieved March 1 2021 گفتوگۆی رۆژانە هاوڕەگەزخوازی هەڵگەڕانەوەیە لە کۆمەڵگە یان لقێکە لە خواستە رەگەزییەکانی مرۆڤ www rudaw net Retrieved March 1 2021 Ali Zhiar March 11 2021 Hello guys The MP who filed a lawsuit against Rasan collected hundreds of signatures to close the organization Twitter Retrieved September 29 2021 External links EditOfficial websiteRasan organization at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Portals LGBT Iraq Kurdistan Human sexuality Feminism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rasan organization amp oldid 1134869621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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