I Am Proud to Be an Ally: Standing with LGBTQ+ Communities Across the World
Winnie Byanyima visited the Centre for Comprehensive Sexual Health Education (CENESEX), Havana, Cuba, 7 May 2024.

I Am Proud to Be an Ally: Standing with LGBTQ+ Communities Across the World

The events of this year’s PRIDE month are showing the world the power of inclusivity. It is by only insisting on acceptance, and rejecting criminalisation, discrimination and stigmatisation, that we can ensure a fairer, safer, future for all. We are all invited to be allies.

PRIDE has always been a protest and commemoration as much as celebration. The first marchers in New York more than 50 years ago understood PRIDE as a way to reject the shame that others sought to impose on them, and to honour the memory of people who had been mistreated and defamed.

For them, defiance and joy were not opposites; their joy was defiance. The LGBTQ+ community have refused to accept subjugation, and have stood in solidarity with all marginalized people.

PRIDE has always been about collective action for justice.

The determination of LGBTQ+ communities and of allies to ensure inclusion for all people has been core to the advances that have been made in recent decades on human rights and in public health.

It is not a coincidence that it was the networks of gay activists built up from the late 1960s who went on to pioneer the community response to HIV at the onset of the AIDS pandemic in the 1980s. They helped mitigate the spread and impact of the virus by providing peer-to-peer information about HIV and delivering care and support at a time when no one else was willing to do so.

They reached out in partnership to defend all minorities from discrimination and violence, and they founded campaigns to overturn the laws and attitudes which violate human rights and obstruct people’s access to services.

As HIV treatment and prevention innovations expanded, it was groups spearheaded by LGBTQ+ activists including ACT UP in the United States and the Treatment Action Campaign in South Africa who drove the campaigns to break the monopoly hold on production of medicines so that all who needed medicines to treat and prevent HIV could access them.

So much has been won!

At the beginning of the AIDS pandemic most countries criminalized LGBTQ+ people — but today more than two thirds of countries do not criminalize them.

Since 2019 alone, Botswana, Gabon, Angola, Bhutan, Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Singapore, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Cook Islands, Mauritius and Dominica have all repealed laws that had criminalized LGBTQ+ people.

But the progress that has been made is in danger.

LGBTQ+ people are under attack, and alongside the attacks on LGBTQ+ communities are attacks on the rights of women and girls, on migrants, and on ethnic and religious minorities.

Leaders fearful of their status and power are whipping up hatred of minorities to divert attention from economic and political woes. They are pushing for draconian laws and enabling vigilantes to follow through on their verbal violence with physical violence.

Meanwhile, at a time when solidarity with human rights defenders is vital and urgent, funding support for civil society organizations is shrinking as donor countries cut their budgets.

We are at a hinge moment, a crossroads: the end of AIDS as a public health threat is realizable in this decade, but progress is imperiled; we can win the battle for human rights for all, but only if we join together to fight for it.

Our collective future will be set by what we do now. Courage and urgency in support of everyone’s human rights is essential to protect everyone’s health.

It is the people at the toughest intersections of injustice who are leading the way.

But they cannot succeed alone; they need allies not only on their side but by their side. Stigma kills; solidarity saves lives.

The United Nations is clear: be proud of who you are, and be proud to be an ally for the human rights of everyone.

Winnie Byanyima is the Executive Director of UNAIDS and an Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations.

Follow Winnie Byanyima at: LinkedIn, X (Twitter).

Ndirangu Mwaura

Ndirangu Mwaura Foundation

2 个月

You sold out. How sad

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Christine Ninsiima

Advocacy and Communication Officer AIC/ HIV/ AIDS Counsellor

2 个月

We are all humans and deserve equal rights. I stand with you

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Kindly consider me, I submit.

Good morning comrades, dear CEO UNAIDS Miss Winnie am also looking forward to working with you to change lives of people especially in my community of mubende district in Uganda, am a youth leader and and organic Farmer basically promoting good health of my youth through formation of youth clubs and young talks, only looking for only 30m? Ugandan shillings to finance my budget, very grateful if my application is considered, thanks, am called John vianney Nowembabazi on +256787464323.

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Its actually little people who will understand you,,#LGBTQ?is something that is not forced to be done ,for those who feel that they want to do it they should be given their rights because its? what they think that gives them peace and to others who don't do it no one will force them to do it, it's like when your going to have a wife,,you have principles that you usually follow before marriage,,so its principles also to either be in #LGBTQ?or leave it,,I don't even see why they should stop or chase it from our country Uganda,,let it be in to those who want or need it but those who don't want ?? they chill them or leave them. My Country Uganda ????? My words not any other person's words,,I stand for those who need their rights not fighting people's freedom.?

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