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MORE FROM THIS AUTHOR
LAURA DOUGLAS-BROWN


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The Pride of Beijing

There are now at least 11 openly lesbian or gay athletes competing in Beijing. An update on their performances as of press time, Aug. 13:

• Judith Arndt, Germany, Cycling. A previous Olympic medalist, Arndt finished a disappointing 41st in the women’s road race Sunday and 6th in the women’s time trial Wednesday.

• Linda Bresonik, Germany, Soccer. After winning their group in preliminary play, the German team advanced to the quarterfinal to play Sweden on Aug. 15.

• Imke Duplitzer, Germany, Fencing. Duplitzer lost in the second round of individual competition 11-15 to Ildiko Mincza-Nebald of Hungary on Wednesday.

• Vicky Galindo & Lauren Lappin, USA, Softball. The U.S. softball team is off to a 2-0 start, defeating Venezuela and Australia.

• Gro Hammerseng & Katja Nyberg, Norway, Handball. Partners on and off the court, Hammerseng and Nyberg helped lead Norway to a 35-19 first round victory over Kazakhstan Wednesday.

• Natasha Kai, USA, Soccer. Having won its group in preliminary play, the team advances to the quarterfinal to play Canada on Aug. 15.

• Matthew Mitcham, Australia, Diving. Scheduled to dive in the men’s 3-meter springboard beginning Aug. 18, and 10-meter platform Aug. 22.

• Rennae Stubbs, Australia, Tennis. Along with doubles partner Samantha Stosur, Stubbs won the opening match and the team is considered a medal contender.

• Victoria Svensson, Sweden, Soccer. Captain of the Swedish team, Svensson led her team to the quarterfinals, where they play Germany on Aug. 15.

                                                       Ryan Lee





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Letter to the Editor

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WORLD NEWS

Chinese gay bars open, activism slowed during Olympics
Activists find inspiration, new enemies from the West

LAURA DOUGLAS-BROWN
Friday, August 15, 2008

The first paragraph of the Aug. 9 entry on John Amaechi’s blog could have been written by any Olympic tourist guilty of staying up too late to take in the local culture.

“I had to wake up at 6 a.m. this morning, which was not fun considering I had been up until 3 a.m., watching the opening ceremony and hanging out at ‘Destination’ again,” he wrote. “I have to say that it got busy very late — I am officially too old for bars that close at 5 a.m.”

Only Amaechi isn’t just any tourist, and Destination isn’t just any bar. Last year, Amaechi made worldwide headlines when he became the first NBA player to come out as gay, three years after retiring from professional basketball. And Destination is the most popular, contemporary gay bar in Beijing, which some activists had fretted would face closure as the Chinese government tried to strictly manage the city’s image during the Olympic Games.

Now, Amaechi, who once feared being ostracized in the sports world, is in Beijing to broadcast Olympic basketball games for the BBC. And the party at Destination continues, drawing a mix of Chinese citizens, ex-pats, and tourists.

“It is a sizeable club, very pleasant staff, which is not a given in every gay bar,” Amaechi told the Blade.

Amaechi noted a lack of racial diversity — “Not many black people about in Beijing outside of the athletes” — and a lack of dancing on weeknights, but otherwise found Destination to be similar to many high-end Western gay bars.

Destination’s Edmund Yang confirmed that the club, which recently expanded from one floor to two, is open and thriving with the Olympics underway.

“So far we have seen more foreign visitors coming to Destination,” he said. “We had a large crowd on the dance floor on Aug. 9, Saturday. The highlight of the night was most of them singing along to the chorus of ‘YMCA’ when I played this oldie towards the end of my set.”

But while gay nightlife has continued in Beijing during the Olympics, Chinese activists acknowledge that the Games have impacted their work.

“There are many new regulations on security, such as Internet censorship, travel, migrant workers in Beijing,” said Bin Xu, who leads an organization for lesbian and bisexual women based in the Chinese capital. “We have to be careful with our work to avoid intriguing safety concerns.”

The heightened security and general restrictions in place during the Games make activist work almost impossible, agreed Damien Lu, a volunteer with Aibai Culture & Education Center, which operates two gay centers and a gay library.

“Most LGBT groups, particularly those in Beijing and surrounding areas, have completely suspended their work during the Olympic period, partly because of logistic reasons (transportation problems, etc), partly because the Beijing public security has become hysterical and closed down many entertainment venues, gay or otherwise,” said Lu, who lives in Los Angeles but travels to China frequently for gay rights work and maintains constant contact with activists there.

“Since many of these groups’ work consists mainly of conducting outreach at these venues, it effectively made it impossible for them to continue,” he said.

‘Homosexuality and AIDS’


Olympic visitors to Beijing will also see another familiar symbol: the ubiquitous red ribbon that has come to recognize the fight against HIV.

According to reports in state-run Chinese media, the Red Cross Society of China plans to pass out thousands of copies of “Together for HIV and AIDS Prevention: A Toolkit for the Sports Community” during the Games, while also stressing HIV awareness at Chinese universities.

The Olympic effort focuses generally on preventing HIV transmission and discrimination, but as in the United States, the fight for increasing visibility for gay people in China has been inextricably linked to the fight against HIV.

Today, an estimated 700,000 Chinese are HIV-positive. Some 11.1 percent contracted the virus through male-male sexual contact, according to a report from the Chinese Ministry of Health, UNAIDS, and the World Health Organization.

The Chinese government did not issue its first research on HIV and gay men until 2004. But since then, outreach efforts, ranging from targeted prevention campaigns to free health clinics for gay men, have been frequent subjects of matter-of-fact news reports from state-run media like the Xinhua News Agency.

“In recent years, the government has made a lot of effort to involve the LGBT community in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Toward that end, the health branch of the government approves of LGBT work and has good relationship with us as well,” said Lu, the Aibai Culture & Education Center volunteer.

Although the government works openly with gay groups in efforts to stem a growing AIDS epidemic, criticism of its efforts from within may meet with a far different response.

Dr. Wan Yanhai, founder of the AIDS-related Aizhixing Institute, has twice been arrested for speaking out against the government’s response to AIDS. In 2002, he went public with information about blood-contamination that may have led to hundreds of thousands of infections; he was arrested again in 2006 for claiming the government was asleep at the wheel in AIDS prevention efforts.

And for Chinese gay activists, being linked with HIV is a double-edged sword — ...

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