LanguageRechercheNewsletter
Logo IDAHOTitre du site
  Home About IDAHO Take action ! News & events Resources Media Our cause Donate
  Home > Take action ! > Past campaigns > "Cures that Kill" - a regional IDAHO campaign >
Face Book Twitter YouTube RSS

Sign the Petition
Image d'illustration

CURES THAT KILL A life without discrimination is a basic Human Right

A pan-American campaign against "reparative" therapies

In May 17th 1990, the World Health Organization (WHO) wrote homosexuality out of its International Diseases and Other Health Problems Statistics Manual” (ICD). For this reason, this date was chosen to celebrate the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO). Although transgenderism still figures in the DSM, medical consensus in many countries affirm that treatment must be available for Trans people to have their bodies adjusted to their gender perception. In line with these orientations, the WHO and the international human rights system oppose all kinds of treatment that aim at “curing” homosexuality.

Despite this, all over the world and in various social and cultural contexts all over Latin America and the Caribbean, cases are reported each year of people who are locked up in so called “psychiatric wards” endorsed and/or managed by certain religious institutions or even public ones, in order to be “cured”. Same-sex attraction or gender variance are considered by these institutions and those who endorse them as a “diversion of personality” that may be “corrected” through pardon and religious beliefs, accompanied with punishment, anguish and physical and psychological torture.

Unable to "cure" their desire, LGBT people in many cases develop feelings of guilt and low self-esteem and self-destructive behaviors. They may even attempt to commit suicide, a phenomenon that is growing particularly among youth and adolescents. Furthermore, such misguided and misleading initiatives, usually based on religious premises, encourage and foster verbal and physical abuse, and even the killing of persons because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. All these are preventable deaths, to which the State must pay attention and take preventive measures.

Homosexuality and transsexualism are naturally occurring expressions of human diversity and are protected by the principles of liberty, equality and human dignity enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international instruments. Still, besides being systematically spread in religious spaces, intolerant fundamentalist discourses are increasingly spilling over into spaces where the principle of secularism should prevail, such as the legislative, executive and judicial sectors, thus influencing the decisions that should be informed by wide scientific consensus and treaties and agreements signed by the States at the international, national and local levels, rather than by the sacred books of any religion, no matter how mainstream they may be.

Those who support the campaign "CURES THAT KILL" oppose the so called “therapies” which aim to “repair,” or “correct,” or “cure” homosexuality and transgenderism. We recognize the positive existence of religious voices in favor of acceptance and respect for all forms of life and unite our voices in a call to religious leaders to be consistent with the principles and rights regarding life, equality, dignity and diversity, and to refrain from promoting lesbophobia, homophobia and transphobia.

We DEMAND that governments in Latin American and Caribbean countries adhere to the principle of secularism and take concrete measures to combat “reparative” practices targeting homosexuality and transgenderism, including the disruption of any public funding to institutions or individuals that have not clearly distanced themselves from such practices.

We DEMAND that the national or local public health systems exclude all practitioners who practice or promote “reparative” approaches.

We URGE private donors to make the explicit opposition to “reparative” therapy a criterion for approval of grants.

We REQUEST that the religious authorities strongly condemn the use of discourses that suggest and / or promote “reparative” processes, and instead promote acceptance of sexual and gender diversity as natural, normal, and health variables of human nature.

PDF - 3.6 Mb
Cures that Kill Appeal full version
PDF - 3.1 Mb
Cures that Kill Appeal short version

Document to download
Cures that Kill Appeal full version
Cures that Kill Appeal short version


Partners

ABGLT – Asociación Brasilera de Lesbianas, Gays, Bisexules, Transexuales y Travestis, Brasil

Aireana - Grupo por los derechos de las lesbianas, Paraguay

Asical - Asociación para la Salud Integral y Ciudadanía de América Latina y el Caribe

CHA - Comunidad Homosexual Argentina

CIPAC - Centro de Investigación y Promoción para América Central de Derechos Humanos, Costa Rica

Colombia Diversa

Diverlex - Diversidad e Igualdad a Través de la Ley, Venezuela

Fundación Arcoiris, Mexico

Fundación Igualdad LGBT, Bolivia

GAHT - Grupo de Apoyo a Hombres Trans, Chile

GALE - Alianza Global para la Educación en Temas LGBT

IGLHRC - Comisión Internacional de Derechos Humanos de Gays y Lesbianas

ILGA-LAC

MHOL - Movimiento Homosexual de Lima, Peru

MUMS - Movimiento por la Diversidad Sexual, Chile

Promsex - Centro de Promoción y Defensa de los Derechos Sexuales y Reproductivos, Peru

SPW – Observatório de Sexualidad y Política


News
Ecuador
The Ecuadorian government has pledged to shut down all ’gay cure’ clinics
Ecuadorian president, Rafael Correa, announced the appointment of Carina Vance Mafla, who is openly gay, as Ecuador’s new health minister. The American-born activist hit the ground running, with an announcement that the health ministry will be working closely with lesbian rights group Fundacion Causana, and other civil rights groups, to shut down the remaining religious clinics which promise to ‘cure’ lesbians. Fundacion Causana, based in Quito, Ecuador, released a statement on the success (...)

Ecuador
Ecuador Government shuts down 30 clinics which were offering illegal ’cure’ against homosexuality
Ecuador was the first country in 2008 to include in its constitution sexual orientation as one of the explicit forbidden grounds for discrimination. In line with this position, the government ordered on August 16th the closure of 30 clinics which were offering to ’cure’ homosexuality. The Government’s decision was prompted by heavy advocacy from victims of the clinics so-called ’treatments’ and from sexual rights organisations. According to syndicated news agency EFE, as many as 200 similar (...)

Peru
Lesbians, Gays, Bisexual and Tarnsgenders marched in Lima to remember victims of Hate Crimes
With a march through the streets of Lima, from Plaza Francia to the "Eye that Cries" -memorial to the victims of violence during the civil war (1980-2000),- fifty LGBT rights activists remembered victims of hate crimes and celebrated the National Day of Action against Violence and Hate Crimes based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity. To the beat of a band that played music, according to the Andean tradition for burials, the activists marchedcarrying banners with the slogan "Not to (...)

Brazil
In Brazil, a Vigil against the Cures That Kill
A vigil at the Esplanade of the Ministries, in Brasília, celebrated last May 17th the International Day Against Homophobia, Lesbophobia and Transphobia. Giant photos projected against one of the National Library walls reminded the urgent necessity to approve the bill that makes homophobia a crime similar to racism. The issue for this year’s campaign was "Cures That Kill". According to the campaign coordinator in Latin America, Jandira Queiroz, the therapies that propose the cures to (...)

Argentina
In Tucumán, Argentina, gender identity is now respected
Celebrating the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia, trans activists and INADI (National Institute against Discrimination, Xenophobia and Racism) of Argentina presented on May 17th the Administrative Resolution Nr. 60/14 of the Secretary of Justice of Tucuman province about physical appearance. The Resolution states that from May 17th, 2011 the civil registration offices of Tucumán can provide shifts for changing the photo of civil identity documents to trans people, (...)


    Contact | Privacy Policy | Credits