logo
LGBT artists decry Supreme Court ruling at rainy London Pride parade

LGBT artists decry Supreme Court ruling at rainy London Pride parade

Yahoo3 days ago
LGBT artists including singer and actor Olly Alexander decried the Supreme Court ruling on the definition of a woman and expressed fears trans people are being 'villainised more than ever' at a rainy Pride in London parade.
Writer Shon Faye and the lead actor in the BBC drama What It Feels Like For A Girl, Ellis Howard, also criticised the judgment.
The Mayor of London Sadiq Khan shouted 'happy pride' and thousands people started to walk through central London, led by a more than a dozen motorcyclists from LGBT groups.
There were shouts for 'trans rights now' as the engines roared and rain started to fall on Saturday afternoon.
American pop singer Chaka Khan is headlining the event that saw around 500 organisations file from Hyde Park Corner, through Piccadilly Circus, and on to Whitehall Place.
Former Years And Years singer Alexander told the PA news agency: 'Trans people right now, they need our support and love more than ever, they're being villainised, demonised in the press, by a lot of the media, and trans people they're just like us… they're you, they're me.
'They deserve the same respect, the same rights, the same privileges, same opportunities, and that's why pride is so important this year.'
The solo artist and Eurovision 2024 contestant added: 'There's been a real backlash against DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) policies and that's been going on for years, and I think we're in a bit of a swing, that's going against where we were maybe five years ago.
'We've had the Supreme Court ruling and I feel like a lot of trans people are scared, rightfully scared, they don't understand… what their lives are going to look like.'
In April the Supreme Court ruled the words 'woman' and 'sex' in the Equality Act 2010 refer to a biological woman and biological sex.
Before the march began Shon Faye, author of Love in Exile and The Transgender Issue, said 'we've just seen an unprecedented attack on queer rights and trans rights across the world'.
She told PA: 'For the trans community in particular here in the UK, we've seen an onslaught of misinformation, attacks in the media, and unfortunately the roll back of human rights in the courts.
'I think (pride) is more important than ever – I think a lot of trans people have been made to feel afraid in public space and pride this year is about taking back public space, and showing what we're not going to be silenced, and we're not going to be intimidated.'
Asked what she hoped would change, Faye said: 'I feel like it's not a one year change deal… movements move in generations, I think what we have to do now is accept the reality of the situation we're in and we have to work together with other groups, within the LGBT community and outside it, to really start forming strong coalitions in order to fight this stuff.
'I think where we're going in the UK, unfortunately this rightward turn is going to continue for some time. The people together are powerful.'
She added: 'I think the reality is what some of these attacks are designed to do is exhaust us… we become very focused and frightened and then sometimes it's easier to retreat in and the reality is we need to do the opposite of that – we need to be willing to work with people who aren't necessarily like us'.
Howard played Paris Lees in the BBC dramatisation of her memoir and, like Alexander and Faye, was supporting trans rights charity Not A Phase at the parade.
He told PA that 'we're in an incredibly precarious political time' and said pride this year is 'more important than ever'.
The actor added: 'I think it's so, so important that we show up as queers, as allies, and we celebrate. Joy is an act of resistance.
'I hope it shows queers of all ages that we stand with you, we are for you, and we love you'.
He added: 'The recent Supreme Court ruling concerns me, the lack of proper tangible support from our Government concerns me, the lack of funding to amazing organisations like Not A Phase really, really concerns me.
'But honestly, I look around, I see stuff like this, I see what grassroots activism can do, and the power that that can have'.
A YouGov poll released ahead of the event found 67% of people in the UK believe the country is inclusive to LGBTQ+ people, and 60% would not welcome a shift towards more negative attitudes.
Simon Blake, chief executive of Stonewall, which commissioned the survey, said despite the findings 'we know many LGBTQ+ people do not feel this in their neighbourhoods and workplaces'.
He added: 'In policy terms, the reality is different too.
'The UK has dropped sharply down the global leaderboard for LGBTQ+ rights.'
This year the UK fell to its lowest-ever ranking for LGBTI human rights, an annual report found.
This was because of the Supreme Court ruling and subsequent UK Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) guidance, said the ILGA-Europe's Rainbow Map, which has run since 2009.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders, accusing them of persecuting women
International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders, accusing them of persecuting women

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders, accusing them of persecuting women

The International Criminal Court on Tuesday issued arrest warrants for two top Taliban leaders, accusing them of persecuting girls and women in Afghanistan. The pair are suspected of 'ordering, inducing or soliciting' the persecution of girls, women and others who don't conform with the Taliban's policy on gender, the ICC said in a statement. Haibatullah Akhundzada, supreme leader of the Taliban, and Abdul Hakim Haqqani, chief justice of the hardline Islamist group, are 'criminally responsible' for carrying out persecution on gender-based grounds since 'at least' August 15 2021, the ICC's chief prosecutor said back in January. The Taliban called the arrest warrants 'nonsense,' writing in a statement that it does not recognize the ICC. Since seizing control of Afghanistan in August 2021, the group has implemented a string of oppressive measures against women and girls, even cracking down on the sound of women's voices in public. Girls have been barred from education after sixth grade. Women must veil their bodies and wear a face covering at all times in public, and have also been forbidden to look at men they are not related to. 'While the Taliban have imposed certain rules and prohibitions on the population as a whole, they have specifically targeted girls and women by reason of their gender, depriving them of fundamental rights and freedoms,' the ICC said on Tuesday. 'Specifically, the Taliban severely deprived, through decrees and edicts, girls and women of the rights to education, privacy and family life and the freedoms of movement, expression, thought, conscience and religion,' it continued. Other people, including 'allies of girls and women' and those with sexualities or gender identities viewed as 'inconsistent with the Taliban's policy on gender,' were also targeted by the Taliban, the ICC said. The Taliban said in its Tuesday statement that the court demonstrated 'enmity and hatred for the pure religion of Islam' by labelling its interpretation of Sharia law a crime against humanity. The issuing of the arrest warrants came a day after the United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution on the situation in Afghanistan, in which it expressed 'serious concern about the grave, worsening, widespread and systematic oppression of all women and girls in Afghanistan,' and called for the Taliban to 'swiftly reverse these policies.' Lisa Davis, the ICC's Special Adviser on Gender and Other Discriminatory Crimes, said in a post on social media that this is 'the first time in history' that an international tribunal has confirmed LGBTQ people to be 'victims of crimes against humanity, namely gender persecution.' Rights groups commended the move. Amnesty International Secretary General Agnes Callamard called it 'a crucial step to hold accountable all those allegedly responsible for the gender-based deprivation of fundamental rights to education, to free movement and free expression, to private and family life, to free assembly, and to physical integrity and autonomy.' Liz Evenson, the international justice director of Human Rights Watch, said that the arrest warrants could 'provide victims and their families with an essential pathway to justice.' This story has been updated with developments. CNN's Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.

Kate Middleton Wears a Givenchy by Sarah Burton Gown for the French State Banquet at Windsor Castle
Kate Middleton Wears a Givenchy by Sarah Burton Gown for the French State Banquet at Windsor Castle

Vogue

timean hour ago

  • Vogue

Kate Middleton Wears a Givenchy by Sarah Burton Gown for the French State Banquet at Windsor Castle

Tonight, the Princess of Wales made a statement in a dark red Givenchy by Sarah Burton gown to a state banquet at Windsor Castle honoring French President Emmanuel Macron. The flowing silk creponne gathered evening gown featured a cape back detailing. The Princess paired it with an evening clutch embroidered with a lily of the valley motif as well as the Lover's Knot Tiara. The diadem, made by the House of Garrard in 1913, consists of diamonds and a collection of 19 hanging pearls set in silver and gold. The Lover's Knot was also a favorite of the late Princess Diana. The Princess of Wales's choice of Sarah Burton for Givenchy is a clear statement of fashion diplomacy: a design by a British woman for a French fashion house, it serves as a sartorial symbol of the symbiotic relationship between the two European countries.

‘Moisturizer' Review: Wet Leg Doubles Down
‘Moisturizer' Review: Wet Leg Doubles Down

Wall Street Journal

timean hour ago

  • Wall Street Journal

‘Moisturizer' Review: Wet Leg Doubles Down

If you were an indie-rock fan in 2021, you had an opinion on Wet Leg's debut single, 'Chaise Longue.' The song, built on the quiet/loud structure that defined '90s alternative rock, wasn't formally daring or particularly confrontational, but it rapidly became ubiquitous. And when that happens to a tune from a previously unknown act, some find it hard to trust, wondering if industry machinations might be behind it all. When the band, led by the English duo Rhian Teasdale (lead vocals, guitar) and Hester Chambers (guitar, vocals), finally released its self-titled debut in April 2022, its remit was to prove that there was more to the project than a viral single. It did so handily—'Wet Leg' had at least a half-dozen good-to-great songs and showed a decent amount of stylistic range. Also embedded within 'Wet Leg' were signs of where the band might later go wrong. Here and there, the group's devil-may-care attitude gave way to a more solemn approach that sounded comparatively conventional. It was possible to imagine a future record where Wet Leg teams with a hit-making super-producer, leans toward pop, and chases a younger audience with straightforward songs about relationships and personal growth. Fortunately, the band's second album, 'Moisturizer' (Domino), out Friday, does none of that. Rather, it finds Wet Leg doubling down on what made it stand out in the first place—oddball humor, disarming expressions of lust and catchy, quirky tunes touching on antecedents like the Breeders and Elastica that avoid sounding like mere novelty.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store