Uruguay And Peru Have Opposing Views
When It Comes To Gay Rights

May 16, 2009
Uruguay has lifted a ban on gay people in
the armed forces while Peru has threatened to fire gay police
officers who cause "scandals", exposing a wide gulf
in South American attitudes towards homosexuality.
The Uruguayan president, Tabare Vazquez,
scrapped a law from the 1973-85 dictatorship that barred gay
people from military academies, cementing his country's reputation
as one of the most progressive in the region.
"The Uruguayan government does not discriminate
against citizens based on their political, ethnic or sexual
identity," Vazquez said.
The defence minister, Jose Bayardi, signed
the decree this week. The ban had categorized homosexuality
among the "mental illnesses and disorders" that
rendered military recruits unsuitable to serve.
Some retired military officers warned that
the liberalisation would undermine morale and discipline,
but protest was otherwise muted. Two years ago, Uruguay's
centre-left government set a regional milestone by legalising
civil unions for gay couples, granting rights over inheritance,
pensions and child custody.
Latin America, long a redoubt of conservative
Catholicism, homophobia and machismo, has mellowed in recent
years. Colombia and Mexico City moved to grant more rights
to gay couples, Buenos Aires opened a flagship gay hotel and
Paraguay signalled it too would allow gay people in the military.
Cuba, which used to jail people for homosexuality,
now tolerates same-sex couples holding hands in the street.
The daughter of the president, Raul Castro, is the island's
leading advocate of rights for gay men, lesbians and transsexuals.
The belief that homosexuality is a perversion
remains deeply rooted, however, and there are few openly gay
politicians, business leaders or celebrities in the region.
Before gay rights advocates could celebrate
Uruguay's decision, Peru, on the other side of South America,
announced it would fire police officers who "damaged
the image" of the police force.
The centre-right government said the new
law, part of a wider crackdown on officers who take bribes
or abuse suspects, would mend the force's tattered reputation.
The supreme court overturned a ban on gay
people in the police and military in 2004. The new law tries
to skirt that ruling by threatening to fire gay officers who
"cause a scandal or damage the image of the institution".
"The only thing that is penalised now
are the scandals that can be caused by a scandalous relationship,
if they are homosexuals," an interior ministry spokesman
said.
By contrast, heterosexuals who cause a scandal
by adultery face only suspension. Jorge Chavez, president
of the Lima Homosexual Movement, said the law appeared to
violate constitutional guarantees. "Heterosexuality isn't
scandalous but homosexuality is? It's discriminatory,"
he told the Associated Press.