SPORTS STARS BACK GAY RIGHTS

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Tennis star Martina Navratilova and basketball star Jason Collins brief journalists on sport and the fight against homophobia. (Pic: UN Photo/Paulo Filgueiras)

Tennis star Martina Navratilova and basketball star Jason Collins brief journalists on sport and the fight against homophobia. (Pic: UN Photo/Paulo Filgueiras)

Tennis legend Martina Navratilova and former National Basketball Association (NBA) player Jason Collins on Tuesday spoke out against homophobic violence and discrimination.

The two openly gay American sports stars spoke to journalists at the UN Headquarters in New York before attending a special event for Human Rights Day, ‘Sport comes out against homophobia.’

“Gays and lesbians seem to be the last group of people that it’s still ok to pick on for whatever reason in whatever way,” Navratilova said, adding that the abuse ranges from being bullied in school to being denied basic rights, incarcerated or sentenced for acts punishable by death in certain countries.

“Sport and politics are inextricably combined. They go hand in hand,” she said urging athletes who are also members of LGBT community to be more visible. “Get in their face. Once you’re visible, you make it personal.”

Responding to media questions about the upcoming controversial Olympic and Paralympic Games in Sochi, Russia, where the authorities have been criticised for their aggressive stance towards sexual minorities, NBA player Jason Collins said the focus should be on the local LGBT community.

“Once the games leave, all those people are still going to be there oppressed,” he said. “That’s something that isn’t right. People should be able to live their lives openly, and not be afraid that if they say or do the wrong thing, just by holding someone’s hand in public that they can go to jail.”

The former Washington Wizards center became the first active male professional athlete in a major North American team sport to come out publicly as gay when he made his announcement in May.

The event also included a video message from Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

“Today, we again denounce all attacks on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or intersex people. We oppose all arrests, imprisonments and discrimination they suffer. And we recommit ourselves to building a world of freedom and equality for all,” Ban said.

“Sports cut across borders and continents. Games unite people across cultural divides. Professional athletes are heroes to their fans. And when they speak out against prejudice, they are heroes to the United Nations,” he added.

Also taking part in the event were Tumi Mkhuma of the Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW) in South Africa, Hida Viloria, Chair of Intersex International (OII) USA, Anastasia Smirnova of Russia’s LGBT Network, as well as UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights Ivan Šimonovic.

More than 76 countries still criminalise consensual adult same-sex relationships, while in many more countries discrimination against LGBT people is widespread – including in the workplace and in the education and health sectors, according to UN figures.

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