Violence against gays on rise, says new book

Amnesty International: Gay Pride marches are mainstream in some countries and gay politicians, actors and pop stars are out …

Amnesty International: Gay Pride marches are mainstream in some countries and gay politicians, actors and pop stars are out and proud - but homophobia is growing across the world, with increasing numbers of countries making it punishable by death.

A new book published by human rights group Amnesty International says that despite widespread acceptance of gays and lesbians in some countries, violent persecution of homosexuals is on the rise and has reached "epidemic" levels in others.

"Lesbian and gay people who form or join organisations, be they political or social, are being violently persecuted in many parts of the world where before they might have been unnoticed," writes the book's British author, Vanessa Baird.

She singles out Uganda, Zimbabwe, Jamaica, El Salvador and Latin America in particular, where she says "the targeting and killing of transgender people has become an epidemic on streets".

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The book, Sex, Love and Homophobia, offers an overview of the experiences of gay, lesbian and transgender people around the world.

In the US, Baird notes an increasing polarisation of attitudes. "While San Francisco boasts the largest openly gay community of any city in the world, anti-homosexual movements in Kansas, Ohio and Colorado advocate as a 'Christian duty' the rejection, and in some cases even killing, of gay people."

The book also focuses on countries where homosexuality is punishable by death - Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Mauritania, Sudan, Pakistan, United Arab Emirates, Yemen and northern provinces of Nigeria. - (Reuters)