Serbia: Lesbians permitted to donate blood

29/11/2006
Submitted by ILGA-Europe

Belgrade - The Serbian Institute for Blood Transfusion has altered its
questionnaire for potential blood donors after a lesbian rights organization
launched protests against what it said was discrimination against homosexual
women, local media reported Sunday.

Labris, a lesbian rights organization, protested the Institute's practice of
rejecting donors affirmatively answered the question: "Have you ever had
sexual relations with a person of the same gender?"

As a result of the protest, a new questionnaire was drafted, without the
contested question.

A Labris activist was told at the institute that she was in a "high-risk
group" because of her sexual orientation.

"You feel like a second-class citizen when you are not allowed to do
something which everybody else is permitted to do," the unnamed activist
told radio B92.

But Gordana Antuljeskov, of the Institute, said the questionnaire was
focused not on high-risk groups, but on high-risk behaviour.

"Homophobes do not work at the Institute for Blood Transfusion, of course,
all blood donors are equal to us ... Simply, safe transfusions are our top
priority." Antuljeskov said.

A new questionnaire will be read for use starting January 2007. Until then,
doctors have been notified of the changes and lesbians will be able to
donate blood.

Though widely seen as sexually liberal, Belgrade remains hostile at least to
openly displayed homosexuality. In mid-2001, the first- ever gay-pride
parade in Belgrade was violently quashed by a mob.

Led by football hooligans, the mob - which included skinheads, "regular"
citizens and even clerics - indiscriminately attacked gay men and women,
while police mostly just watched.


Published: 11/19/2006
TurkishPress.com
http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=152031

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