Archive for August 20th, 2012

Publication du Rapport Moisan

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Par Gay Globe Média

Suite au débat des chefs dans le cadre de la campagne électorale pour l’élection Québec 2012, le Premier ministre Jean Charest a mentionné l’existence d’un rapport d’enquête accusant le Parti Québécois de Madame Pauline Marois de finacement illégal. Gay Globe Média a obtenu copie de ce rapport et le publie intégralement au http://www.gayglobe.us/Rapport_Moisan.pdf

Or, dans ce rapport suivant une commission d’enquête non publique, il est clairement mentionné que le Parti Québécois a reçu des contributions illégales de plus de 96,000$, que le Parti connaissait ces faits et que les contributions venaient de l’argent servant aux commandites illégales. incroyable.

Est-ce que Madame Marois, qui déclarait au débat des chefs connaître l’existence de ce rapport, mentait aux québécois en disant qu’il impliquait aussi l’ex-ministre Nathalie Normandeau? Le rapport, sur cette question est pourtant clair, il mentionne en effet l’ex-ministre Normandeau mais pour la déclarer propre et non coupable de quelque malversation que ce soit.

La crédibilité de Madame Marois, en agissant ainsi pour manipuler l’opinion publique en direct, vient d’en prendre un sacré coup! Dommage!

 

Gilead’s All-in-One HIV Pill: Not One, Not Two, But Three?

Monday, August 20th, 2012

RTT news

The concept of a single-tablet regimen for HIV represents the simplification of antiretroviral therapy. At the altar, awaiting the regulatory decision is Gilead Sciences Inc.’s (GILD:Quote) Quad, the third single-tablet HIV regimen. Atripla, approved in 2006, and Complera, approved in 2011, are the other two single-tablet HIV regimens.

Quad contains Gilead’s two investigational drugs – Elvitegravir, which is an integrase inhibitor, and Cobicistat, a boosting agent, in combination with Truvada (Emtricitabine and Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate). If approved, Quad would be the only once-daily, single-tablet regimen containing an integrase inhibitor. Unlike other classes of antiretroviral drugs, integrase inhibitors interfere with HIV replication by blocking the ability of the virus to integrate into the genetic material of human cells.

Gilead’s Atripla contains three HIV medicines in one pill – Sustiva (efavirenz), Emtriva (emtricitabine) and Viread (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate). Complera contains Emtriva, Edurant (rilpivirine) and Viread combined in one pill. Truvada, Gilead’s second-largest sales-getter, combines Emtriva and Viread in one tablet.

In pivotal phase III studies, Quad demonstrated comparable efficacy with Atripla and ritonavir-boosted atazanavir plus Truvada in achieving viral suppression and increasing CD4 cell counts after 24 and 48 weeks. In May of this year, an FDA panel voted 13 to 1 in support of approval of Quad for the treatment of HIV-1 infection in adults. The FDA usually follows the recommendations of its advisory panels, although it is not required to do so. The FDA’s decision date is set for August 27, 2012.

Gilead submitted the NDA for Quad’s components – Elvitegravir and Cobicistat in June of this year. The company has made regulatory filings for Quad, Elvitegravir and Cobicistat in Europe also.

HIV drugs namely, Atripla, Truvada, Viread, Complera and Emtriva account for a major chunk – making up 85%-86% of the company’s total revenue. In the second quarter of 2012, Gilead’s HIV franchise sales were up 15% to $1.986 billion. Quad, if approved, will be the next to join Gilead’s HIV product portfolio.

Shares of Gilead have thus far hit a low of $34.45 and a high of $58.84. The stock closed Friday’s trading at $56.75, up 0.11%.

http://www.gayglobe.us

Gays in Cold War Poland: new book opens communist closet

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Thenews

A new book emphasizes that by and large, homosexuality was treated as if it did not exist by Poland’s communist authorities.
Press

Press materials

Krzysztof Tomasik’s book, Gejerel: Mniejszości seksualne w PRL (GRL: Sexual Minorities in the Polish People’s Republic), is one of the first in-depth studies on the matter.

Tomasik notes that homosexuality was rarely referred to in public by the communist authorities, and if so, preferably in the context of the “decadent” West.

Technically, homosexuality was not in itself a crime in communist Poland, echoing pre-war legislation from 1932.

However, the author argues that in court cases where a defendant or plaintiff was revealed to be a homosexual, this information invariably worked against him or her, regardless of the charge.

Homosexuality during that period is portrayed by the author as very much an underground phenomenon. Nevertheless, society was not ignorant of it, and there were occasional gay caricatures in films.

“The idea was to laugh at it, as that’s how it was handled in films, otherwise to ignore it,” reflected gay rights activist Wojciech Szot in a discussion about the book on Polish Radio.

However, there were secret police actions against gays, most notably “Action Hyacinth”, which was launched in 1985.

The nationwide operation was ordered by Minister of the Interior Czeslaw Kiszczak, with thousands of gays detained and interrogated across the country.

An extensive database was built up. However, the regime’s precise motives remain unclear. The action took place when the AIDS scare was sweeping across the West, and gays were considered at high risk of catching the disease at that time.

On the other hand, it has been argued that the material was a rich source for blackmail, as has been frequently noted regarding the cases of some priests who were pushed into becoming informers.

Tomasik’s book also highlights some of the first calls for acceptance of homosexuality.

Among these articles are Barbara Pietkiewicz’s “Bitter Purple”, published in the Polityka weekly during the Solidarity Trade Union’s push for civil rights in 1981, as well as Krzysztof Darski’s “We are different”, which was originally published under a pseudonym.

http://www.gayglobe.us

Madonna sued in Russia for supporting homosexuality

Monday, August 20th, 2012

IBN

Moscow: Some Russian activists have sued Madonna for millions of dollars, claiming they were offended by her support for gay rights during a recent concert in St. Petersburg.

Anti-gay sentiment is strong in Russia. In St. Petersburg, a law passed in February makes it illegal to promote homosexuality to minors, and the author of that law has pointed to the presence of children as young as 12 at Madonna’s concert on August 9.

Russian news agencies quote Alexander Pochuyev, a lawyer representing the nine activists, as saying the suit was filed against Madonna, the organiser of her concert, and the hall where it was held, asking for damages totaling 333 million rubles, or nearly $10.5 million.

Madonna sued in Russia for supporting homosexuality

Responding to criticism that the plaintiffs were stuck in the Middle Ages, the lawyer said they were using civilised, modern methods to defend their rights. “No one is burning anyone at the stake or carrying out an inquisition,” Pochuyev was quoted by RIA Novosti as saying. “Modern civilisation requires tolerance and respect for different values.”

The complaint includes a video taken at the concert showing Madonna stomping on an orthodox cross and asking fans to raise their hands to show the pink armbands in support of gays and lesbians that were distributed among the audience, the new agency reported.

Madonna’s spokeswoman, Liz Rosenberg, did not immediately respond to emails asking for the singer’s reaction to the lawsuit.

Madonna also has angered conservative Russians with her support for Pussy Riot. Three members of the punk band were sentenced to two years in prison for a protest inside Moscow’s main cathedral against Vladimir Putin and his cozy relationship with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Madonna spoke out in support of the group during her concert in St. Petersburg and two days earlier in Moscow. After the verdict was issued, Madonna called on “all those who love freedom to condemn this unjust punishment”.

http://www.gayglobe.us

Liberia: Gay War – Who Will Win And Why?

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Allafrica

Entrenched traditional practices and religion on the one hand and deepening obsession for modernity and civic liberties on the other have submerged Liberia, which just graduated from 16 years of political and physical brutal war, into a potentially cataclysmic social and spiritual warfare. And it seems each belligerent group is panting with both passion and fury, grimly determined to prevail over the other. In the last few months, covert and overt maneuvers from both sides have increased in intensity and it appears an open war with possible casualties is imminent in the next weeks as the Lower House of the Legislature, perhaps woozy with impact of the fight, falls into deep lull over this serious matter.  Privy to some of the schemes at bay, The Analyst reports the veracity and imminence of the war and the possibility that victory can befall any side–awfully soon.

Broad Street in Monrovia, which is from time immemorial is regarded the nation’s pride–the busiest and elegant center–has since the civil conflict turned into a paradise of pickpockets and other violent criminals particularly at night. What many Liberians may not know is that nocturnal Broad Street has also become a hub of prostitutes, including gays and lesbians.

Night-lifers on the eve of last Independence Day beheld the evidence when many nearly ran for cover in the aftermath of fracas that ensured between two male gangs attempting to reach for the heads of each other over claims and counterclaims to a common gay husband.

Minutes earlier, a plate-less black van arrived and packed before King Burger and before the occupants disembarked, two young men from each of the gangs quickly emptied their classes from which they were drinking and moved towards the van. Hardly did the occupants of the van disembarked then shouts and yells of the two men attracted their gang members as if the barrages of curses from the two men were an invitation to parent gangs for rescue.

And before the melee ensued, the black van and its occupants, whoever they were, sped up, leaving behind volleys of blows and clinking sounds of bottles on the tarmac of Broad Street.

This is the trouble we have on this street every now and then,” said a female eyewitness trading roasted frozen meats nearby. “Since my mother bore me I have never seen this kind of thing. Man loving to man, woman to woman and, more so, fighting over lovers of their sex for sex.”

She refused to disclose her name but said further: “Those who don’t believe that gay and lesbian life exists in Liberia and exists in their numbers must come to Broad Street after 10pm and see something.”

Broad Street, certainly, is not the only place gays and lesbians are hooking up and making real this rather strange practice–strange in terms of Liberian heterogeneous sexual culture. Not only are there countless reports of similar rows of prostitutes of the gay-lesbian business, there are wild rumors and speculations that homosexual practice is also pervasive if not rampant private and public offices.

Speaking on a local radio station’s religious morning talk show yesterday, the head of an anti-gay pressure group, the New Citizen Movement, Inc., said she had reports that private and public offices were basing their recruitment of staff and employees not on merit but on the willingness of the applicant to accept homosexual relationship.

“There is no doubt homosexual practices abound in Liberia nowadays,” said Rev. Cleopatra J. Watson. “This is a handiwork of Satan in his drive to fake everything that God does.”

Fights & Schemes

Homosexual practice has existed in Liberia for decades, according to some experts, but it has come to bitter public fight when a Liberian who claims not to be a gay assumed a pioneering proponent role for same-sex marriage this year.

Achie Ponpon first made himself a controversial figure when he played a ringleader role in the burning of a Norwegian flag in Monrovia over what he and his fellow demonstrators called Oslo’s underserved decoration of President Sirleaf with the prestigious Nobel Peace prize nearly on the eve of a crucial presidential elections which the President won.

Days after his release from prison over the flag-burning incident, perhaps to win favor with the West, including Oslo, or to entrench budding public attention on him, Ponpon took media airwaves and pages to drum up support to homosexual practices or same-sex marriage which remains a taboo subject in Liberia.

In addition to speculations that Ponpon’s provocation of this highly volatile social subject had got financial and moral backing of strong national and international forces, some individuals have said Ponpon has confided that his advocacy was merely driven by the quest to overcome the claws of poverty which have haunted him for so long.

Anti-gays Schemes & Tactics

Whatever the motive, the professed non-gay turned gay rights advocate has got himself at odd with the dominantly traditional heterogeneous sex society of Liberia. In addition to threats to life he reported, Ponpon was chased out of the University of Liberia intellectual forum by sticks-and-clubs-whirling youth.

It was not long after the University of Liberia chase that Ponpon alarmed that there was an arson attempt on the home of his Mother by people he considered anti-gay and anti-rights elements.

Not only did he also narrowly escaped the wrath of mob when he had gone to speak in support of same-sex marriage on local radio talk show, Ponpo also nearly caused mob arson of the local radio station on the same day.

While the mob-justice schemes in the gay war continued to be perpetrated by some conservative, culture-sensitive groups and individuals, other citizens have gone brutally civil not only with community-based sensitization and animation of the populace against same-sex traditions, but also with a proposed legislation to avert and ultimately obliterate the evolving homosexual rights debate in Liberia.

The crudest of anti-gay right attack has come so far from the Liberian Senate, which without its characteristic bickering and debates, unanimously passed a bill amending the a Section of the Domestic Relations Law of Liberia to outlaw or make same-sex marriage felonious.

Insiders say a number of influential members of the Senate are fiercely lobbying with the highly complicated Lower House to pass concord and pass the bill as quickly as they did at the Upper House.

Meanwhile, a Christian movement has joined the anti-gay war and has begun to mobilize and extract citizens’ signatures to pressure the Lower House and possibly consequently the President to pass the bill into Law.

Rev. Cleopatra J. Watson, head of the New Citizens’ Movement, Inc., has commenced a mass people’s campaign not only to rally popular support but also to press the moral conscience of authority to expeditiously legitimize anti-gay practices in Liberia.

Watson told her talk show host Sunday that the advent of same-sex relationship in Liberia represents the latest scheme of the Devil to fool and destroy God’s creation.

“This is spiritual battle, and we the people of Liberia, this land of God, cannot afford to sit back and watch our young people who are the major preys destroyed,” she said.

Pro-Gay forces’ Maneuvers

Ponpon, as one pundit put it on a local TV talk show recently, “is a mere shadow, a courier boy and lackey of a hugely powerful force behind the curtains” working around the clock to popularize and possibly legalize same-sex practices in Liberia.

Since the main proponents hardly come public, pro-gays’ agenda and schemes are seen from what critics say. “They are using ‘cash violence’ to abuse and defile our young people,” said New Citizens’ Movement’s founder, Rev. Cleopatra Watson. “They take advantage of the fact that most of our people, particularly the youngsters who are the main preys, are poor. When they count US$500 which a young boy or girl had never owned, the business is done.”

Like Rev. Watson, other commentators believe powerful private and public sector authorities are using high unemployment amongst young people to coerce young people succumb to same-sex relationship.

Liberia’s poverty rate, let alone unemployment, falls at the abysmally low level of United Nation’s and other international watchdog groups’ Development Index. These conditions of poverty, pundits admit, create the fertile ground for the success of “cash violence” that naturally meets many young Liberian vulnerable and susceptible to gay-and-lesion initiation.

Proponents, if not necessarily practitioners of homosexualism, have also continued to lift the debate from the domain of culture and religion to purview of universal rights; that the marriage (however defined by any culture) is a right–a matter of choice by the individual–recognized by international conventions and statutes and rectified by many nations, including Liberia.

To uphold this right, power nations particularly the West, have voiced no opposition to homosexual relations; in fact, the United States and Great Britain, have expressed willingness to support efforts by groups desirous of promoting homosexual practices in the developing world, particularly Africa where heterogeneous sexual practices and anti-homosexual movements are dominant.

Recently, threats by the United States to stop aid to Liberia if the Government failed to support gay and lesbian marriage were only denied frivolously. The Embassy “clarified” that US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton only voiced her government’s support to gay movements but did not threat to stop aid on the matter.

This justification appeals to a number of copious individuals (both male and female) who use their wealth to take the hands of persons of their sex into marriage or casual into sexual relationship.

It is widely rumored in the country that the homosexual barons, on the basis of powerful countries support to their sexual orientation, have intensified their onslaught and many communities, street corners, offices and nightclubs have become scenes of chaos of scrambles for gay and lesbian prostitutes in the country.

Who Will Win–and Why?

The final battle, dubbed the lobby battle of the century, is currently raging and the current site of it is the Lower House of the Legislature. For nearly two months now, since the Senate passed the bill seeking the outlawing of same-sex marriage, the bill languishes, if not dusting, in House Committee Room.

Insiders say the big guns are being fired, and cash violence is taking its toll. The Lower House replete with newcomers building their financial foundations stand vulnerable, some analyst said, and even though most of them lawmakers may be professed Christians, they want to keep themselves afloat and unharmed politically by keeping it endlessly in Committee Room or chop lobby fees and leave the burden for President Sirleaf.

But others presage it should not be a surprise when “Cash Violence” prevail and homosexuals and their supporters celebrate because of the susceptibility of lawmakers to pecuniary drives. Many times, the public and even members of the House accused lawmakers of taking bribe at the expense of probity and public interest.

This history of the House, some experts believe, should not be ruled out in the anti-gay bill which is strongly supported by powerful forces having combined influence from the ground and away.

However, some commentators are optimistic about the passing of the bill from the Lower House which they believe is dominated by professed Christians and Muslims belong to religions that denounce homosexuality.

Members of the two dominant religions have begun a campaign to confront their members in the Lower House with moral imperatives of their faiths.

Already, one group, the New Citizens’ Movement, Inc. says it is soliciting 100,000 signatures to make a strong case to the Legislature and the President of Liberia for the expeditious passage of the amended Domestic Relations Law seeking the direct outlawing of homosexual practices in Liberia.

It is also being reported that Muslims are bracing up to form similar initiatives to call on their members in the House and President Sirleaf to pass the bill into law without further delay.

There also a probability for the anti-gay proponents to prevail since the Legislators and the President shall on the altar of moral force and tradition and none may one to be mistaken as atheist or immoral despite of human rights angle of the debate.

http://www.gayglobe.us

VIH : espérance de vie normale grâce aux trithérapies

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Radio-Canada

Les personnes infectées par le VIH-sida et traitées par antirétroviraux peuvent maintenant espérer vivre aussi longtemps que les personnes non infectées, ont montré des chercheurs suisses.

Les auteurs de l’étude, associés à l’Hôpital universitaire de Bâle, expliquent que la stratégie de traitement individuel doit cependant être bien adaptée dès le début de la thérapie.

La majeure partie des personnes infectées par le virus de l’immunodéficience humaine (VIH) sont traitées par la thérapie antirétrovirale. Les trithérapies, combinaison de trois parfois quatre antirétroviraux, améliorent déjà considérablement la qualité de vie et le pronostic des patients infectés par le VIH.

La présente étude montre que l’espérance de vie de ces patients peut être pratiquement la même que celle des personnes saines. Le début de la thérapie antirétrovirale et en particulier le choix de la combinaison de médicaments sont déterminants dans ce type de traitement à vie, comme la réponse qui sera donnée durant la première année de traitement.

Dans le cadre de l’Étude suisse de cohorte VIH du Fonds national de la recherche scientifique, des chercheurs de l’Hôpital universitaire de Bâle ont analysé en détail les thérapies initiales chez 1957 patients entre le 1er janvier 2005 et le 31 décembre 2009 sous l’angle du taux de réponse au traitement. Les résultats ont montré une suppression totale de la charge virale chez près de 90 % des patients en moyenne.

Des facteurs individuels, comme le stade de l’infection par le VIH, les co-infections comme l’hépatite C ou la présence d’un risque cardio-vasculaire, déterminent le choix des médicaments. L’étude montre qu’un modèle intégré de soins de recherche, tel qu’il est proposé par l’étude de cohorte, conduit à des réponses au traitement très élevées.

Une étude de cohorte consiste à observer la survenue d’événements de santé dans le temps au sein d’une population définie, incluse au démarrage de l’étude puis suivie sur plusieurs mois ou années selon un protocole de recueil de données adapté aux objectifs de l’étude : examens de santé, interviews, prélèvements biologiques, analyse de dossiers, etc.

http://www.gayglobe.us

Le site du Premier ministre ougandais hacké par des militants gays

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Grandslacs

La sécurité des sites internet officiels de l’Ouganda a été renforcée, après la mise en ligne sur le portail web du Premier ministre ougandais Amama Mbabazi d’un communiqué défendant les droits des homosexuels, a indiqué vendredi le régulateur de la toile ougandaise.

http://www.gayglobe.us

Russie: Les Tribunaux interdisent la Gay Pride pour les 100 prochaines années !

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Morandini

L’affaire fera sans doute moins de bruit que la condamnation des Pussy Riot, mais ce que viennent de décider des Tribunaux Russes parait incroyable en 2012.

Pour contrer l’interdiction annuelle de la Moscow Pride, les militants moscovites ont profité d’un vide juridique pour déposer, en août 2011, des demandes d’autorisations de manifester jusqu’en 2112.

Ces demandes ont été rejetées, confirmant l’interdiction de Gay Pride pour les 100 prochaines années en Russie

En première instance, le tribunal ne s’était pas contenté de juger légal le refus de la capitale russe, il l’avait assorti d’une interdiction formelle d’organiser les manifestations.

Un tribunal municipal vient de confirmer cette décision.

Nikolai Alekseev, le fondateur de l’association GayRussia, à l’origine de cette action, a annoncé son intention de saisir le Presidium (la plus haute cour de Moscou) et, en cas d’échec, de s’adresser une nouvelle fois à la Cour européenne des droits de l’Homme.

http://www.gayglobe.us

Le soutien de Madonna aux gays examiné

Monday, August 20th, 2012

20minutes

La Russie va examiner une plainte contre Madonna pour son soutien aux homosexuels, dans le cadre de la diffusion d’images de croix orthodoxes brisées pendant l’un de ses concerts.

storybildLe tribunal va décider si la plainte dirigée contre la chanteuse est recevable. (photo: Keystone)

Un tribunal de Saint-Pétersbourg a déclaré lundi à l’AFP qu’il déciderait d’ici à la fin de la semaine de la suite à donner à une plainte déposée contre la star américaine Madonna pour son soutien aux homosexuels pendant un concert local.

«La plainte contre la chanteuse Madonna a été déposée vendredi dernier. Le tribunal doit décider dans les cinq jours si elle est recevable», a affirmé à l’AFP Mme Tatiana Senko, du Tribunal Moskovski de Saint-Pétersbourg (nord-ouest).

Les plaignants, militants de groupes ultranationalistes peu connus comme la Nouvelle Grande Russie et le Syndicat des citoyens russes, considèrent avoir été offensés par les propos de la chanteuse qui a plaidé en faveur de la cause homosexuelle pendant un concert dans cette ville le 9 août dernier.

Sentiment religieux offensé

Les plaignants estiment également que la chanteuse a offensé les sentiments religieux des orthodoxes, en diffusant des images de croix orthodoxes brisées pendant ce concert.

«Les plaignants réclament un dédommagement pour préjudice moral», a indiqué Mme Senko sans préciser la somme réclamée.

L’avocat des neuf plaignants, Alexandre Potchouïev, cité par les agences de presse russes avait indiqué vendredi vouloir réclamer 333 millions de roubles (8,5 millions d’euros) de dommages et intérêts à la star américaine.

http://www.gayglobe.us