UNITED
NATIONS — Former professional basketball player Jason
Collins and tennis great Martina Navratilova on Tuesday urged
world sports bodies
like the International Olympic Committee and FIFA to take gay rights into
consideration when awarding major sporting events.
The two
openly gay athletes spoke at a special United
Nations event celebrating International Human Rights Day.
They focused
in part on the upcoming Winter Olympics inRussia,
which passed a law this summer banning homosexual “propaganda.” The law has
drawn international condemnation and sparked calls for a boycott, though no
nations have threatened to pull their athletes.
Navratilova,
who lost lucrative endorsements when she came out in 1981, said she doesn’t
support boycotts of any kind. But she said the IOC is “putting its head in the
sand” and criticized FIFA, the world soccer body, for awarding the 2022 World
Cup to Qatar.
“Nobody’s
talking about Qatar and the Wo rld Cup. You can get a jail term there,” she
said of consensual gay sex in the Persian Gulf nation. In six other countries,
including Saudi Arabia, simply being gay is punishable by death, she said.
“Gays and
lesbians seem to be the last group it’s seen as OK to pick on,” she said.
The two
athletes also joked about how times have changed for gay rights in the U.S.
“When Collins
came out this year, he got a phone call from President Obama congratulating
him,” Navratilova said. “Well, in 1981, Reagan was president. I didn’t get that
phone call.”
“It’s funny,
right before President Obama, it was Oprah Winfrey,” Collins added. “Like a
surreal experience.”
Collins
almost shyly thanked Navratilova for being so outspoken.
“I’m sitting
next to one of my idols,” he said.
North
America’s major pro sports leagues are still awaiting an openly gay athlete.
Collins, 35, was prepared to become the first when he came out after the NBA
regular season had ended. The aging reserve player and free agent has not been
signed by another team, though he says he stays in shape and hopes to return to
the NBA.
Collins said
the league is doing a “great job changing the culture of sport” in regard to
gay players.
In a recorded
message, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also praised straight athletes who
speak out against homophobia. “They understand an abuse against any of
us is an affront to all,” he said.
In a related
event Tuesday, U.S. ambassador Samantha Power called the Russian law “as
outrageous as it is dangerous.”
Power, who
was meeting with dozens of gay activists from around the world, said 78
countries still have laws that criminalize consensual sex between adults.
“To deny gays
and lesbians the right to live freely … is in fact barbarian,” Power said.
This year was
the first time the U.N. held a ministerial meeting on LGBT issues, with
Secretary of State John Kerry attending. “Tha t’s progress,” Power
said.
Russian
journalist and gay right activist Masha Gessen then read part of the Russian
law on gay “propaganda” and said, “It actually enshrines second-class
citizenship and makes it a crime to talk about equality.”
Zambian
activist Juliet Mphande listened to Gessen’s comments and said, “I imagine
Russia to be an African country right now.” She said at least six people from
her country’s gay community had been arrested this year.
This is great news and incredible visibility at such an important forum. Thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteso nice that he is taking this path
DeleteI sometimes imagine how turned out the sports, music, movie & performance arts industries would be if all Gay in the industries came out! These industries would have no choice but to accept we run these industries or play a major in it's success!
ReplyDeletewe will get there one day
Delete