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Despite high court verdict, homosexual activists say nothing has changed

Naz Foundation director Anjali Gopalan said the favourable ruling had come after an eight-year battle but the plight of lesbians in India continues to be the 'worst'.

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The Delhi high court may have decriminalised homosexuality a year ago, but leading homosexual rights activists today claimed that nothing had changed on the ground as homosexuals still face discrimination and harassment, including by the police.

"It was one of the momentous judgments in the last 60 years. But still on the ground nothing has changed. Police still target the community. They are often beaten up and harassed," Ashok Row Kavi of the Humsafar Trust said.

Row Kavi was speaking at a panel discussion on 'Gay Rights as Civil Rights: Perspectives from the US and India'.

He, however, admitted that a lot of issues have opened up following the Delhi high court judgment.

Naz Foundation director Anjali Gopalan said the favourable court ruling had come after an eight-year battle, but the plight of lesbians in India continues to be the "worst".

"Lesbians [female homosexuals] are absolutely at the bottom of the ladder," she said.

The Delhi high court in July last year had legalised homosexual acts among consenting adults holding that the 149-year-old law making it a criminal offence was violative of a citizen's fundamental rights.

Speaking on the occasion, US deputy chief of mission Donald Lu said President Barack Obama considers the rights of homosexuals to be fundamental human rights and that the US administration is committed to improve the community's plight.

"The president is personally involved in this movement to remove the stigma," he said, extending support to the homosexual rights community in India.

A video message of Obama on homosexual rights was also shown during the conference where the US president underlined the importance of ensuring the rights of all sections of society.

"As a nation we are founded on the belief that all of us are equal and each of us deserves the freedom to pursue our own version of happiness; to make the most of our talents; to speak our minds... to be true to ourselves. That is the freedom that enriches all of us. That is what America is all about," Obama said.

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