Posts Tagged Wimmin/Women

Judge: No prepayment for abortion transport

by Michael Kiefer – Oct. 21, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

A Maricopa County Superior Court judge on Tuesday ruled that the Sheriff’s Office cannot force jail inmates to prepay the cost of being transported to a clinic to obtain an abortion.

Judge Robert Oberbillig said he felt “compelled” to add the ruling to an existing injunction against the Sheriff’s Office forbidding it from demanding court orders before taking inmates to abortion clinics.

Sheriff Joe Arpaio appealed that 2005 injunction all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which refused to hear the case.

Then his office told another inmate that she would have to pay $300 to $600 in advance to cover the office’s cost of transport and security before being taken to the clinic. If she wanted a waiver for the fee, she could get a court order. The woman was able to obtain funds for the transport. Still, the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona, which brought the initial suit, argued that the prepayment created another obstacle to a woman’s right to obtain a timely abortion under the U.S. Constitution.

Deputy Chief Sheriff Jack MacIntyre told The Republic that the court should have waited for a new case with a plaintiff who still needed an abortion, “someone whose actual constitutional rights have been affected. This really is judicial activism taken a few steps too far,” he said.

But ACLU attorney Brigitte Amiri told the court, “That will effectively mean that some women will lose their constitutional right and be forced to carry a child to term.”

Amiri told the court that the three women who have been plaintiffs over the history of the case had their abortions delayed seven weeks, four weeks and six weeks, respectively, which she claimed placed their health in danger and delayed their constitutional rights.

The ACLU did not dispute the sheriff’s right to demand reimbursement for the transport costs.

But Daryl Manhart, an attorney for the Sheriff’s Office, argued that extending credit in advance would be tantamount to giving away the money, as the inmates would likely not pay it back.

Oberbillig questioned Manhart rigorously over the hour-and-a-half long hearing, but ultimately ruled on the side of the side of the ACLU.

MacIntyre and Manhart both said that the Sheriff’s Office would likely appeal the ruling.

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Oakland: Film Screening!! Tongues Untied and The Fire This Time

Friday, October 17, 2009 at 7:30 PM come join us for movie night at the historic Cable’s Reef in Oakland, CA. We will be screening a preview of the upcoming film, The Fire This TIme, as well as featuring the full length film, Tongues Untied.

Come join us for Movie Night at the former Cables Reef, Oakland.

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Tongues Afire: A Free Creative Writing Workshop for Queer Women, Trans and Gender Non-Conforming People of Color

When: Every Wednesday at 6:30 PM

Where: Audre Lorde Project, 85 South Oxford Street; Brooklyn, NY 11217

Directions: C train to Lafayette Avenue; G train to Fulton Street; 2, 3, 4, 5, B, Q, D, M, N, R to Atlantic Avenue/Pacific Street

Always want to write, but never seem to find the time? Looking for a supportive space to develop new work? This workshop, led by writer-teacher-performer R. Erica Doyle, is for writers of all levels. Sessions will incorporate readings along with in-class workshop exercises in literary memoir, poetry, and short fiction. Participating writers will develop methods of constructive critique and strategies for incorporating writing in their everyday lives. Information on publication, funding, and reading opportunities will be shared. This year, we will do a Reading Series in which present and past Tongues Afire participants will read alongside three established writers at the Audre Lorde Project.

Led by R. Erica Doyle

To Apply - Send an email to tonguesafire@gmail.com with the following information

•    Your contact information (name, phone, email, mailing address),

•    One paragraph that describes who you are and how you identify as queer woman/gender non-conforming person of color (be creative and definitive)

•    One – two paragraphs for why you want to be a part of Tongues Afire, and

•    A writing sample  (1-3 pages of poetry, prose, fiction, or creative non-fiction)

The deadline to apply is Wednesday, October 07, 2009.  Space is limited.

***All applicants will be notified by e-mail and accepted applicants must confirm their attendance upon notification.

About the Workshop

*Always want to write, but never seem to find the time? Looking for a supportive space to develop new work? This workshop, led by writer-teacher-performer R. Erica Doyle, is for writers of all levels. Sessions will incorporate readings along with in-class workshop exercises in literary memoir, poetry, and short fiction. Participating writers will develop methods of constructive critique and strategies for incorporating writing in their everyday lives. Information on publication, funding, and reading opportunities will be shared. This year, we will do a Reading Series in which present and past Tongues Afire participants will read alongside three established writers at the Audre Lorde Project.

About the Workshop Facilitator

*R. Erica Doyle is a writer of Trinidadian descent who lives in New York City. Her work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including Best American Poetry, Ploughshares, Callaloo, Bum Rush the Page, and Ms. Magazine. She has performed her work at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, Kennedy Center, Public Theater, St Mark’s Poetry Project, Bar 13, Bowery Poetry Club, and the Calabash Literary Festival in Jamaica. She has taught creative writing workshops at the 14th Street Y, the Brooklyn Public Library, Union Settlement, Sisterspace and Books, and in the New York City public schools. She is the recipient of awards and fellowships from the Hurston/Wright and Astraea Foundations and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She is a fellow of Cave Canem, a workshop and retreat for African-American poets.

* Anyone who identifies as a woman of color is welcome, including people of color who self-identify as women, trans, butch lesbians, bois, drag queens, bi-gendered, two-spirited, drag kings, femme queens, A.G.s, genderqueer, non-gendered, andro, crossdressers, gender-benders, gender fluid as well as other identities of peoples who face gender oppression because of their non-conventional gender expression.

Tongues Afire is made possible by support from the Brooklyn Arts Council, Poets and Writers, Inc and the Audre Lorde Project.

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Mixed Verdict in S. African Lesbian’s Murder Trial

Paballo Thekso/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Supporters of Eudy Simelane danced in August outside the court where three men charged with her killing were to go on trial. One defendant was convicted Tuesday and two were acquitted.
Published: September 22, 2009

DELMAS, South Africa — Eudy Simelane was a 31-year-old lesbian activist and one of this nation’s best female soccer players, a tall, muscular woman who knew how to defend herself with her fists and her elbows. She could not have been easy to kill.

Before leaving her naked body face down in a drainage ditch, her murderers stabbed her nine times, said the doctor who performed the autopsy. Three of the deep cuts were in the upper inside of her thighs. Those wounds as well as the bruising at the entrance of her vagina led the doctor to conclude that the assailants had tried to rape her.

In February, one of the attackers, Thato Mpithi, 23, pleaded guilty to murder, implicating three other men before denying their involvement almost six months later. On Tuesday, in a courtroom here in Delmas, two of the men he named were acquitted for lack of evidence, though the judge, Ratha Mokgoathleng, warned that they might someday have to answer to God.

The other man on trial, Themba Mvubu, 24, had no reasonable explanation for his trousers’ being stained with Ms. Simelane’s blood. He received a life sentence but walked from the courtroom smiling, showing no contrition and telling a reporter, “Ach, I’m not sorry at all.” He disappeared down a stairway to a holding cell as some of Ms. Simelane’s friends shouted that they would prefer he be sliced into pieces.

Ms. Simelane, who was killed in April 2008, was one of 18,148 murder victims in the 12 months that ended in March. Tuesday was also the day the South African Police Service released its annual crime report. The data showed 339 fewer homicides than in the previous 12-month period, an improvement that still left this country of 49 million people with one of the world’s highest murder rates. At the same time, the number of reported sex crimes jumped to 70,514, up nearly 7,000. Burglaries of homes and businesses also increased sharply.

South Africans are obsessed with the violent crime in their midst, and earlier this month the new police minister, Nathi Mthethwa, tried to reassure them. “We are tired of waving nice documents like the Constitution” at criminals, he said, vowing instead to “meet the thugs head-on, and if it means we kill when we shoot them, so be it.”

The problem with such tough talk, gay and lesbian groups say, is that it often excludes crimes directed at them. They claim they are special targets of violence, and snickering, abusive police officers do little to protect them or pursue their complaints.

The Simelane case has been central to a campaign to bring attention to attacks against lesbians and gay men. But sexual orientation was never established as a motive at the trial. Judge Mokgoathleng was uncomfortable with the term lesbian itself. “Is there another word that you can use instead of that one?” he asked the prosecutor.

Ms. Simelane grew up in Kwa Thema, a township of small, modest homes southeast of Johannesburg. “There were three of us: Eudy, me and Zodwa,” said Pretty Makhalya, her closest friend. “Whatever we did was boyish. We were different, you could tell. We were athletes. We played with the boys but we had feelings for the girls.”

By high school, they better understood their sexuality, she said. They dressed butch, wearing pants and T-shirts, jockeys instead of panties. They dated other girls, preferring their partners “looking beautiful with makeup and everything.”

Kwa Thema was unusual among townships. Lesbians were quite open. Most boys their age were comfortable around them. “But there were also guys who’d say, ‘C’mon, we’ll teach you how to be a girl,’ ” Ms. Makhalya said. “They looked at us like we were crazy people, defying nature. Things would heat up. There’d be fights.

“And it wasn’t just some boys who hated us, we realized. Some churches were no-go areas. They wouldn’t let us in if we were wearing trousers.”

Ms. Simelane was one of the best-known people in Kwa Thema. People were wild about soccer, and she was good enough to make the national team, Banyana Banyana, competing internationally for a few years. She was a bar-hopper, not just hanging out at places like Savey’s and Hlubi’s that welcomed gay men and lesbians, but at other spots, too.

Her killers attacked her in the darkness as Ms. Simelane was walking home near an open field. Mr. Mpithi said that he did not know Ms. Simelane, and that robbery — not her identity as a lesbian — was the only motive for the attack. One of the other three men, Johannes Mahlangu, decided to rape Ms. Simelane because she was carrying no money, Mr. Mpithi said. As the sexual assault went on, Ms. Simelane recognized Mr. Mvubu. To save themselves from arrest, the men decided she had to be killed.

Mr. Mpithi, promising to testify against the others, was given a 32-year prison sentence. But when the trial began in July, he said he had become a born-again Christian and could no longer repeat his earlier lies. He then said that the other three defendants were not involved.

Without Mr. Mpithi’s incriminating testimony, the judge found only Mr. Mvubu, caught in the bloodstained pants, guilty. The other two defendants went free.

Khotso Simelane, Ms. Simelane’s father, watched them go, the shackles removed from their legs. He had observed the trial’s unfolding, a rail-thin retired bricklayer often burying his head in his hands.

“Those two should never come back to Kwa Thema,” he said. “Eudy was loved, and the mob will kill them for stealing the life of my daughter.”

A version of this article appeared in print on September 23, 2009, on page A8 of the New York edition.

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