The European Commission has said in a written note that respect for gay rights is a legal criterion for EU accession.
It cited the 1993 so-called Copenhagen criteria for EU eligibility
and article 2 of the EU Treaty, which prohibit discrimination against
"minorities."
It also cited articles 10 and 19 of the EU Treaty and article 21 of
the European Charter on Fundamental Rights, which explicitly forbid
discrimination on grounds of "sexual orientation."
"Rights of LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] people thus
form an integral part of both the Copenhagen political criteria for
accession and the EU legal framework on combatting discrimination. They
are closely monitored by the EU commission, which reports annually on
the progress made by enlargement countries with regard to the situation
of the LGBT community," it said.
The commission note was sent to EUobserver in response to a question born of an interview with an Armenian cleric.
Armenia, a deeply Christian country where church teaching has more
authority than in many EU states with Christian roots, is keen to become
an EU member.
Homosexuality is not against the law. But according to a recent study
by the Brussels-based rights group Ilga-Europe, it scores better only
than Moldova and Russia in terms of legal protection of LGBT people in
Europe.
Armenian law does not prohibit discrimination on grounds of sexual
orientation or gender identity. It does not recognise any form of
same-sex partnership and has no provision for legally changing one's
gender, the study says.
Its legal edifice is reflected in popular feeling.
A small pro-toleration rally in the Armenian capital on 21 May saw
police struggle to keep counter-protesters at bay, who yelled slogans
referring to gay people as a disease and as a threat to children.
Three priests came to speak to media, one of whom recalled the
Biblical story of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah to justify
anti-gay views.
Counter-protesters the same night vandalised one of Yerevan's few gay-friendly bars.
For his part, Bishop Hovakim Manukyan, an ecumenical officer at the Armenian catholic church, made no bones about the situation.
"It's not in our culture to accept homosexuals. I mean, we don't
reject the person, but we reject the sin and this is our freedom as
Armenians. Our culture does not accept this," he told EUobserver in a
recent interview in Etchmiadzin, the official seat of the Armenian
church.
He said Armenia upholds basic human rights, but gay rights are a
"secondary" issue where difference of opinion should be permitted.
"We have our cultural differences which should be respected ... These
are questions on which you don't have consensus also in Europe. Europe
is not just western Europe. For instance, Poland is a strong Christian
country, or Romania or Bulgaria, or Serbia - Armenia is closer to these
countries in its understanding," he explained.
EU entrants in some cases negotiate opt-outs from EU laws or
transition periods for implementing sensitive parts of the rulebook.
But for Ulrike Lunacek, an openly lesbian Austrian Green MEP who
co-chairs a European Parliament gay rights group, this does not mean
countries can choose which values they adopt.
"Accession of a country will not be possible if certain LGBTI [the I
stands for 'intersex'] rights are not put into law and into practice.
Non-discrimination in the field of employment, for instance, has become
part of the acquis," she said, citing an EU directive on
non-discrimination from 2000.
"Protection of Pride marches has become a recurrent monitoring theme
in the commission's progress reports on enlargement countries," she
added.
She noted that EU institutions should work with conservative
countries on the Union's fringe rather than putting up barriers,
however.
"That is what the EU also stands for: co-operation instead of
confrontation, openness instead of fear ... And that is another good
thing," she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment