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‘Trans’ male rugby player injured three female opponents
David Menzies, Rebel News
Jul 27, 2023, 11:17 AM
The Fergus (Ontario) Highlanders women's rugby team seems to have a bit of an unfair advantage. One team member, Ash, is a biological male who didn't even bother to disguise his balding head with a blonde wig, or prominent facial structure with a bit of makeup.
Ash, or "Ashley" Davis, possesses huge, manly quads which give him the momentum to tackle female opponents in a way that's been described as being "hit by a bus on the field."
In just one game against the Stoney Creek Camels last month, this brute caused three women injuries severe enough to remove them from the game.
Why won't Ash pick on people his own size? And do his teammates support this unsafe and unfair playing strategy?
I visited Fergus, Ont. last Saturday for a game between the Highlanders and Burlington, to find some answers. There, I saw Ash's "ambush-predator" style for myself.
His teammates weren't too happy about the questions I asked...
"You are traumatizing my family! That's my wife!" Ash's supposed partner screamed hysterically, while shortly after, another of Ash's teammates told me that she had no clue what the definition of a female was because she's "not a doctor."
Alas, after being blocked by a human chain formed by the Fergus Highlanders rugby team, I had a lovely conversation with the local police, who were called on me for my abhorrent "crime" of asking questions.
The astonishing response by the young women told me that they are apparently so indoctrinated that they take no issue with this cheater playing against — and routinely injuring — real female players.
Is Ash's play-time a win for "diversity, equity, and inclusion," or just a win for misogyny? You tell me.
It's a win for madness, David. Opposition teams should refuse to play against this shameless jerk.
Arrests highlight the growing 'criminalisation' of LGBT+
people in Venezuela
Thirty-three people were arrested in a popular spot among the LGBT+ community in Valencia, Venezuela on July 23. After the arrest, the people's names, photos and ID cards were shared in the media and online. Since being released, they are still awaiting legal proceedings. Venezuelan associations have denounced what they see as a growing trend of "criminalisation" of LGBT+ individuals and institutionalised homophobia in Venezuela.
Issued on: 04/08/2023 - 14:39, 4 min
Text by: Chloé Lauvergnier
Activists denounce institutional homophobia at a rally in the capital Caracas, Venezuela on July 28.
© Twitter / @_Provea.
On July 23, police arrested 33 people at the Avalon Man Club, a private sauna and spa frequented by the LGBT+ community in Valencia, in the northern Venezuelan state of Carabobo. The operation was allegedly carried out after an anonymous tip-off.
The people were taken to the police station, where they were photographed lined up along a wall. Police photographed their belongings, including identity papers, mobile phones and condoms. These images were shared in the local media and on social networks with their identities left unredacted. Their names and ages were shared publicly as well.
These photos of the 33 people arrested in Valencia, Venezuela, on July 23 were distributed without redaction
(black bars added by the FRANCE 24 Observers team). Observers
This photo showed the mobile phones and identity documents of the people arrested in Valencia, Venezuela, on July 23, as well as condoms. Blurring added by the FRANCE 24 Observers team.
'The police and local media have stigmatised and criminalised them'
Jau Ramírez is the director of SOMOS, a movement working for the rights of sexual minorities in Venezuela.
These 33 people were arrested arbitrarily, without a judicial warrant or search warrant. What's more, the police and local media then spread personal information about them and declared that one of them had HIV, in order to stigmatise them, criminalise them, give the impression that they were a danger to society, and thus justify the violation of their rights. At first, it was even said that they were taking part in an orgy and filming pornographic scenes...
A number of journalists' organisations have also criticised the way in which certain media outlets have handled the case, adopting all the information provided by the police.
On Twitter, the National College of Journalists (CNP) said that "reproducing information that stigmatises and denigrates the people involved" was a "violation of human rights", and pointed out that the media should "respect the presumption of innocence and protect the identity of anyone accused of illegal acts".
Charged with, among other things, public indecency
On July 26, the 33 people were taken to the Valencia courthouse. The court upheld three charges brought by the public prosecutor against them: public indecency – an offence punishable by several months in prison – as well as unlawful association and noise pollution. At the end of the hearing, 30 of them were released, but with the obligation to report to the authorities every 30 days.
On August 2, the three others – the owner of the establishment and two employees – were also released. They too have to report back every 30 days.
But things did not end there. The charges against them have not been dismissed, despite demands from activists. On August 1, the public prosecutor announced that the case could possibly be dismissed.
'The current situation sets a legal precedent'
Jau Ramírez continued:
Between January 2021 and December 2022, we documented 11 arbitrary arrests of LGBTIQ+ people, carried out by the security forces. In four cases, they were accompanied by extortion, physical, verbal and psychological violence and acts of torture. There were also four police raids on LGBTIQ+ leisure facilities in Caracas, Maracaibo and Mérida.
So the case of the 33 people arrested is not a first. But in previous cases, the people were released after a few hours, without being reported to the police or charged with any offence. In this case, the people have remained in detention for a long time, without any justification, and the charges against them are unclear and questionable.
We therefore consider that the current situation set a legal precedent. We haven't seen anything like this in Venezuela since the late 1990s. Since the beginning of this case, the police and judiciary have acted in a homophobic manner, with the aim of criminalising LGBTIQ+ people.
This escalation of repression is a threat to the fundamental rights and sexual and personal freedoms of everyone in Venezuela.
Closer links between the authorities and evangelicals
For Jau Ramírez, this repression goes hand in hand with "the interference of ultra-religious groups and their dogmatism in state institutions". He cites a few examples:
In 2019, President Nicolás Maduro created the National Day of the Evangelical Pastor. In 2022, his son was appointed vice president of religious affairs within the United Socialist Party of Venezuela, a new position. In 2023, Nicolás Maduro also created the "My well-equipped church" programme [Editor's note: equipping evangelical groups with seats, fans, microphones, etc.].
Nicolás Maduro has recently forged closer ties to certain evangelical sectors, which have been very active in opposing the rights of the LGBT+ community. In July, the government decided that religious groups would be consulted on any legislative initiative involving the family. This rapprochement is part of a "political strategy" with a view to 2024 and the presidential election, according to the Spanish daily El País.
Venezuela's LGBT+ community has been fighting for years against discrimination and for access to equal rights, including marriage for all. In March 2023, the courts overturned a provision that provided for a prison sentence of between one and three years for military personnel accused of "unnatural sexual acts".
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