Department of Defense โcontractorsโ landed on a Mexican beach and accidentally declared it United States territory in a bizarre incident on Monday.
A group of unidentified men hammered six signs into a beach near Playa Bagdad in Northeast Mexico on Nov. 17. The signs declared that the area was โDepartment of Defense propertyโ and had been classified as a โrestricted areaโ by โthe commander.โ The area is roughly twelve miles south of the U.S.-Mexico border.
Heavily armed Mexican Navy personnel came to investigate the scene and discovered that the men had landed in Mexico by mistake and intended to plant the signs in South Texas. The situation was resolved without violence, and the Mexican Navy removed the signs. Pictures and videos of the incident circulated on social media over the following days.
The sign U.S. contractors were placing on Mexican soil.X / @MORRIS80766176
The accidental annexers were later identified by the Pentagon as โcontractorsโ hired by the Department of Defense to plant the signs on the Texas side of the border to mark โNational Defense Area III.โ The Pentagon has been installingย a seriesย of โNational Defense Areasโ in 2025 to tighten control of the U.S.-Mexico border.
โChanges in water depth and topography altered the perception of the international boundaryโs location,โ said the Pentagon in a statement. โGovernment of Mexico personnel removed six signs based on their perception of the international boundaryโs location.โ
The statement added that the contractors will โcoordinate with appropriate agencies to avoid confusion in the future.โ
The Mexican government has begun investigating the incident.
โThe Mexican Section of the International Boundary and Water Commission (CILA) will begin technical consultations to fully clarify the incident and will review the maps and instruments that mark the border between both countries, as established by existing boundary and water treaties.โ
Armed members of the Mexican Navy arrived to investigate the U.S.’s accidental invasion of Mexico.X /MORRIS80766176
โWould I want strikes in Mexico to stop drugs? OK with me, whatever we have to do to stop drugs,โ he said in an appearance alongside FIFA President Gianni Infantino.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaumย rejected that notionย at her Tuesday press briefing, saying itโs โnot going to happen.โ She also addressed the accidental invasion, saying the International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC), a binational agency overseeing the U.S.-Mexico border, would get involved in the dispute.
โThe river changes its course, it breaks loose, and according to the treaty, you have to clearly demarcate the national border,โ she said.
Sheinbaum was referring to the Rio Grande River, which marks the U.S.-Mexican border, per the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The IBWC has had to negotiate additional treaties to mark the border in the years since, as the river has naturally shifted over nearly two centuries. The latest treaty on record was signed in 1970.
U.S. troopsโ declaration of a Mexican beach property of the Department of Defense violated that treaty.
The Pentagon, IBWC, and U.S. Embassy in Mexico did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
โHey hey, ho ho, Donald Trump has got to go,โ protestors chanted in the middle of Times Square, among a sea of signs that read โlove reigns not kings,โ โgays against faux-king Trump,โ โwe stand with โฆ our trans familyโ and โthe future is coming.โ
On Saturday, independent analysts estimated that the No Kings March drew betweenย 5 and 8 million people, andย organizers sayย over 7 million people attended 2,700 events across all 50 states. The event, which was organized to push against the rise of authoritarianism in the U.S., was the largest single-day protest in America since 1970.
Over 100,000 New Yorkers marched in all five boroughs in NYC on Saturday. Photo by Jelinda Montes.
Among the crowd were countless LGBTQ people, fighting back against an administration that has introduced a litany ofย anti-LGBTQ executive ordersย and usedย vile rhetoricย to denigrate queer people. This backsliding of LGBTQ rights, according to experts, has a deep connection to authoritarianism, withย researchย showing that when governments weaken protections for queer and trans people, they often turn to broader democratic institutions next.
โThreats to democratic institutions and threats to LGBTQ rights are mutually reinforcing, generating a vicious cycle that strengthens authoritarian control,โ Ari Shaw, director of International Programs at the Williams Institute, told Uncloseted Media. โIncreased persecution of minority groups, including LGBTI people, is itself evidence of democratic backsliding by indicating the erosion of liberal democratic norms [meant to protect] minority rights.โ
Legal Abuse of Power
One of the ways the Trump administrationโs abuse of power has been most evident is through its legal actions.
Heโs also slashed HIV funding at a staggering rate. Uncloseted Mediaย estimatesย that the National Institutes of Health has terminated more than $1 billion worth of grants to HIV-related research, including 71% of all global HIV grants.
Jeffrey Cipriano at the NYC No Kings protest Saturday. Photo by Jelinda Montes.
It was these cuts that prompted Brooklynite Jeffrey Cipriano to turn out to protest. โThe specific reason that Iโm protesting is actually on the shirt Iโm wearing,โ says Cipriano.
โMy best friend works for an organization called AIDS United. โฆ His job is to travel the country and help people get AIDS medication, specifically trans and unhoused community members. But his job is at risk,โ he says. โThe end outcome of his work is that people who have issues in their lives have the issues resolved and thatโs going away under the current administration.โ
Executive orders are based on powers granted to the president by the U.S. Constitution or by Congressional statutes. The president cannot use an executive order to create new laws or spend money unless Congress has authorized it. They are meant to direct how existing laws are implemented. But Trump hasย ignored democratic norms, often filling agencies with loyal supporters, using orders to go after political opponents and pushing the limits of what the law allows.
In some cases, he has moved illegally. โThe President is directing various executive branch officials to adopt policy that has either not yet been adopted by Congress or is in violation of existing statutory law,โ says Jodi Short, professor of law at UC Law San Francisco. โThe analogy to a king and what has troubled many about this presidency is the sheer consolidation of executive branch power in one individual.โ
Shortโs colleague, Dave Owen, agrees. โIllegality has been rampant,โ he told Uncloseted Media in an email. โPeople are often cynical about the government, and they might think what Trumpโs doing is nothing new. But most of the time, the executive branch takes the law seriously, and both legal constraints and norms of good governance matter,โ he wrote. He says that through history, thereโs been โa lot more integrity and a lot less lawlessness than most people realize.โ
โThis administration has broken with those traditions,โ he adds.
Revolt Against Executive Orders
Many Americans have recognized this. Aย surveyย from April found that 85% of Americans agreed or strongly agreed that the president should obey federal court rulings even if he doesnโt like them.
In response to Trumpโs overreach, more thanย 460 legal challengesย have been filed across the country challenging his executive actions. One of these is a federal lawsuit by Lambda Legal and the Human Rights Campaign Foundation thatย challenges the constitutionalityย of the Trump administrationโs ban on military service by transgender people. Anotherย lawsuitย challenges Trumpโs order directing federal agencies to withhold funds from medical providers and institutions that provide gender-affirming medical treatments for people under 19.
Zoe Boik and her father, Derik, protesting on Saturday. Photo by Sean Robinson.
Both of those lawsuits are one reason 17-year-old Zoe Boik came out to protest with her friends and her dad. โObviously, Iโm disappointed and kind of helpless because thereโs nothing I can directly do to change or impact anything thatโs going on,โ says Boik, who identifies as pansexual and gender fluid and is not legally allowed to vote.
Boikโwho was seven years old when Trumpย announced his run for presidency in 2015โsays sheโs doing a research paper on Trumpโs trans military ban and is frustrated because she sees it as inexplicable discrimination. โTheyโre not letting trans people serve โฆ which doesnโt make any sense.โ
Zoe as a child with her dad, Derik. Photo courtesy of Boik.
LGBTQ Rights and Democratic Backsliding
This type of blatant discrimination is often a key sign of a country moving closer to authoritarianism and away from democracy. According to a 2023ย research paperย by Shaw and his colleagues, anti-LGBTQ stigma may contribute โto the erosion of democratic norms and institutions.โ
The paper found that when a country with relatively high acceptance of LGBTQ rights introduces anti-LGBTQ legislation, it clashes with what most people believe and can weaken public trust in democracy, deepen political divides and make it easier for populist or extremist movements to gain power.
โThe level of acceptance of LGBTQ people is closely associated with the strength of democracy in a country,โ Shaw says. โIn some cases, we even saw that rising anti-LGBTQ rhetoric or policies preceded a broader decline in democracy.โ
In Brazil, for example, early democratic gains coincided with rising LGBTQ acceptance, including legal recognition of same-sex unions and workplace protections. But as populist President Jair Bolsonaro came into power in 2019, he began questioningโwithout evidenceโthe security of Brazilโs voting systems,ย sayingย he would only lose his re-election campaign if there were fraud. He was also accused of trying toย interveneย in operations held by the Federal Police about the alleged criminal conduct of his sons, and heย toldย his ministers that he had the power and he would interfereโwithout exceptionโin all cabinet ministries. At the same time, LGBTQ protections were rolled back, and schools and civil society faced censorship, suggesting that falling LGBTQ acceptance may have โpreceded Brazilโs democratic erosion,โย according to Shawโs paper. In September of this year, Bolsonaro was sentenced to 27 years in prison forย plotting a military coup.
Another example is Polandโs democracyย weakening since 2015 under the Law and Justice Party, which consolidated power by undermining the Constitutional Tribunal, installing loyal judges and restricting independent media. Anti-LGBTQ rhetoric became central to the partyโs nationalist platform, fueling the creation of nearly 100 โLGBT ideology free zones,โ inciting violence against LGBTQ individuals and stymying legal recourse through politicized courts.
When it comes to LGBTQ rights, Trump has mimicked the moves of these leaders even though most of his constituents donโt want it: Aย 2022 surveyย from the Public Religion Research Institute found that 80% of Americans favor laws that would protect LGBTQ people against discrimination.
โThe definition of an authoritarian system is a system where power is consolidated in one individual whose power is unchecked by any other institution. And I fear that in certain domains, thatโs the direction in which this administration is trying to move us,โ says Short. โI think itโs incredibly dangerous.โ
Attacks on Higher Education
Anotherย common toolย in the authoritarian playbook is attacking higher education.
While many universities areย rejecting Trumpโs demands, others are experiencing a chilling effect, changing their policies before the administration tries to hold up funds.
James Revson, Maddy Everlith and Shay Wingate holding their signs at the No Kings protest. Photo by Jelinda Montes.
โIโm here because Iโm angry and I feel that we arenโt angry enough,โ Maddy Everlith, a sophomore gender studies major at Pace University, told Uncloseted Media as she marched with her friends. โBeing a woman of color in America and having so many intersectional identities is also what affects me. โฆ I want to stand up and advocate for other people.โ
Everlithโs university responded to Trumpโs threats in September by renaming its DEI office to the โDivision of Opportunity and Institutional Excellence.โ
โI am beyond horrified how quickly our university was willing to bend the knee on this decision,โ Austin Chappelle, a senior at Pace,ย told the student newspaper. This change comes in the midst of uncertainty under the Trump administration, which has already caused many LGBTQ students to feelย uneasy on campus.
Scapegoating Transgender People
Beyond the laws and policies lies a vile rhetoric used to scapegoat trans Americans. During the 2024 federal election campaigns, Trump spent roughly $215 million onย anti-trans ads, more than five times as much as he spent on ads focused on the economy. In addition, heโs monstrified the community, saying, โThese people are sick. They are deranged.โ Heโs also said Democrats are โpushing the transgender cultโ on children and has aligned with groups trying toย designate transgender Americans as terrorists.
โItโs part of an electoral strategy to try to mobilize right-wing voters to distract from other sorts of political or economic scandals,โ Shaw says, adding that this tactic is another way to gain power.
Lars Kindem protesting for his trans sister at the No Kings protest. Photo by Sean Robinson.
The pain of this rhetoric has affected millions of trans Americans and allies alike, including Lars Kindem, a 64-year-old retired pilot from Minnesota who was marching to support his transgender sister.
โWhat Trump has done is heโs taken people that havenโt done anything wrong and has turned them into scapegoats,โ he says, adding that Trumpโs language is โhateful, petty, mean and hurtful.โ
He says his sister and her partner are having issues getting theย correct gender markers issued on their passports. Because of the Trump administrationโs treatment of the community, they are making plans to move to Denmark, where โthereโs a lot more acceptance.โ
Christian Nationalism
This scapegoating has played into the hands of Trumpโs voter base of white evangelical Protestants, theย only major Christian denomination in the U.S.ย in which a majority believes society has gone too far in accepting transgender people.
Since 2020, Trump has increasingly embraced Christian nationalism in his rhetoric and imagery. Heโsย sold Bibles, created aย federal task force on anti-Christianย bias and been intrinsically linked to Project 2025, the 920-page plan calling for theย establishment of a governmentย imbued with โbiblical principlesโ and run by a president who holds sweeping executive powers.
Expertsย sayย that โa strong authoritarian streakโ runs through conservative Christianity. Aย 2023 studyย found that supporters of Christian nationalism tend to support obedience to authority and the idea of authoritarian leaders who are willing to break the rules. Nearly half of Christian nationalists support the notion of an authoritarian leader.
โThey are trying to use the language of Christianity, but they are abusing it and misusing it constantly,โ Rev. Chris Shelton, a gay pastor at the protest, told Uncloseted Media. โOur faith is all about reaching out to the marginalized, reaching out to the people who are ostracized by society and embracing them and offering love and welcome and a sense of dignity and worth. And to see any human beingโs worth being denied is just a mockery of our faith.โ
Rev. Chris Shelton marched in Saturdayโs NYC protest. Photo by Sean Robinson.
Heidi Beirich, the vice president and co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, says that โthe LGBTQ community is the prime target of modern authoritarian regimes.โ
โFor Christian nationalists, attacking LGBTQ rights is the first pillar in destroying civil rights for all. This has happened in countries like Hungary and Poland as authoritarianism consolidated and now itโs happening here,โ Beirich told Uncloseted Media.
Moving Forward
As the country bleeds toward authoritarianism, LGBTQ protestors are encouraging people to use their voice, something the queer community is familiar with doing: One 2012 survey found that queer folks areย 20 times more likelyย to be active in liberal social movements than their straight, cis counterparts.
โIt is imperative that people continue to pay attention,โ Short says. โThere is so much going on, a lot of it is disturbing and intense, and thereโs such a strong impulse to look away. But we have to engage in political action and resist inappropriate assertions of authority and continue to show up and vote for our democracy.โ
17-year-old Zoe Boik is ready. She remembers being in second grade and crying the day after Trump won his first election in 2016. She couldnโt believe how he could lead the country despite โall the bad things he said.โ
Boik canโt wait until the midterm elections, when she will be 18 and finally able to vote. โIf we donโt vote, then our voices wonโt be heard,โ she says.
Despite this, sheโs also concerned about her freedom to exercise that right being jeopardized.
โMy fears about Trump donโt stem specifically from me being queer, but from his authoritarianism as a whole,โ she says. โI am scared about how far he will move into dictatorship, [and] my biggest fear is that our right to vote will be compromised, leaving us no recourse.โ
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Uthmeier focused on how heโs working to ensure that concerned parents can continue their โmovement โฆ based on faith, based on family, ensuring that we have the freedom to raise our kids in Godโs image.โ
โIโm about eight months on the job now as Attorney General, and as I tell my team every day, our No. 1 priority is, and will always be, protecting our kids. Thereโs a lot of evil out there. Thereโs a lot of evil, a lot of danger. There will always be crime, no matter how much we fight it. But our first priority must always be protecting our kids,โ he said to applause.
Uthmeier went on to describe his Officeโs legal actions againstย Targetย for its โtransgender childrenโs clothing lineโ with โbras for little boys, some tuckable underwear.โ
โGross. Absolutely disgusting,โ he said. โWeโre going to hit them in their wallets.โ
โPredators are all over that app, all the apps, but that one in particular. Itโs their preferred vehicle to go after kids,โ Uthmeier said.
โAnd theyโre crafty, theyโre smart, theyโre patient. Theyโll use fake pictures. Theyโll talk in a dialect. Theyโll get your kids to, you know, drop their guard. Theyโll tap into their insecurities, and theyโre willing to spend weeks or months to develop a relationship before they start soliciting information, soliciting photos, soliciting locations. And since weโve sued them, weโve made dozens of arrests of child predators that have gone after kids through this app.โ
Uthmeier also described how his Office is able to enforce the law, including by serving as a โlaw firm for parents out thereโ who might be concerned by what school districts do.
โIf youโre identifying one of these wrongs thatโs violating your rights and thatโs subjecting our kids to danger and evil, then we want to know about it, and weโre going to bring the heat in court to shut it down.โ
The AG also quipped about a recent call to people toย report their exesย for immigration violations, noting one gender predominantly was dropping the dime on the other.
โYโall ladies are savage, Iโve got to tell you. These calls come in and these ladies, I mean, theyโve got date of birth, nickname, frequented bars. I mean, all the details. So to the handful of men out there, treat your women right or they will absolutely get you.โ
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The European Unionโs (EU) highest court has ruled that EU countries must recognize same-sex marriages between EU citizens lawfully conducted in another EU country, even if same-sex marriage is not legal in their home country.
On Tuesday, November 25, the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that Poland must recognize the marriage of a same-sex Polish couple who married in Berlin while living in Germany in 2018. When the couple โ who have only been identified by their initials in the case โย returned to Poland and requested that their German marriage certificate be transcribed into the Polish civil register, authorities refused, because Polish law doesnโt permit same-sex marriages or civil partnerships. When the couple challenged that refusal, the Polish Supreme Administrative Court referred it to the Court of Justice.
โThe spouses in question, as EU citizens, enjoy the freedom to move and reside within the territory of the Member States and the right to lead a normal family life when exercising that freedom and upon returning to their Member State of origin,โ the court said in aย press release.
The court added that โsuch a refusal is contrary to EU lawโ and โinfringes not only the freedom to move and reside, but also the fundamental right to respect for private and family life.โ
โThis ruling is historic,โ Pawel Knut, a lawyer representing the couple involved in the lawsuit, said in a statement, perย Reuters. โIt marks a new beginning in the fight for equality and equal treatment
MEP Emma Wiesner Meanwhile, during a Tuesday press conference in Strasbourg, France, Swedish MEP Emma Wiesner called the ruling โa great victory for love.โ
The court also clarified that the ruling does not require member nations to subsequently legalize same-sex marriage in their national laws. While member states enjoy a โmargin of discretionโ to choose the procedures for recognizing a marriage conducted in another EU country, โthose procedures must not render such recognition impossible or excessively difficult or discriminate against same-sex couples on account of their sexual orientation.โ
The Guardianย reports that although Polandโs prime minister, Donald Tusk, has been working on a same-sex marriage bill, his efforts have been met with resistance from Polish president Karol Nawrocki, an ally of the countryโs right-wing, anti-LGBTQ+ Law and Justice party. Nawrocki has said that he would veto โany bill that would undermine the constitutionally protected status of marriage.โ
A court in Japan has decided the ban on equal marriage is constitutional (usuke Harada/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
A court in Japan has decided the ban on equal marriage is constitutional (usuke Harada/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
In a blow to the Japanese LGBTQ+ community, a court has ruled the countryโs ban on same-sex marriage is constitutional.
The decision handed down by Tokyoโs High Court on Friday (28 November) outlined thatย Japanโs ban on equal marriage does not violate Article 24(1) and (2) or Article 14(1) of the Constitution.
The judgement is the final ruling in a series of six high court lawsuits on same-sex marriage that were filed between 2019 and 2021 in cities including Tokyo, Osaka andย Sapporo. With all the high court decisions now made, a Supreme Court ruling is expected.
Judge Ayumi Higashi said a unit between a heterosexual couple and their children is a rational legal definition of a family and the exclusion of same-sex marriage is valid. Alongside this, the court also dismissed damages of one million yen ($6,400) which was sought by each of the couples in the lawsuits.
โIโm outraged and appalledโ
Speaking outside court, as quoted by theย Associated Press, plaintiff Hiromi Hatogai said the decision left her โdisappointedโ: โRather than sorrow, Iโm outraged and appalled by the decision. Were the judges listening to us?โ
Her partner, Shino Kawachi,ย saidย it was โdifficult to comprehendโ, adding: โWhat is justice? Was the court even watching us? Were they considering the next generation?โ
โWe only want to be able to marry and be happy, just like anyone else,โ another plaintiff, Rie Fukuda, told reporters.
โI believe the society is changing. We wonโt give up.โ
Japan is the onlyย G7 countryย that does not recognise equal marriage or offer legal protection to queer couples, whilst in wider Asia onlyย Taiwan,ย Thailandย andย Nepalย offer same-sex marriages.
Participants for Tokyo Pride events march on the busy streets of Shibuya in Tokyo, Japan, on June 8, 2025. (Yusuke Harada/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Commenting on the decision, Amnesty Internationalย criticisedย the ruling and said it effectively means discrimination against LGBTQ+ couples in Japan is permissible under the law.
โThe courtโs decision today marks a significant step backwards for marriage equality in Japan,โ Amnesty Internationalโs East Asia researcher Boram Jang said.
โThe ruling in Tokyo โ the final high court ruling of six lawsuits filed across the country and the only ruling to say, in effect, that discrimination against same-sex couples is constitutional โ cannot be allowed to hamper progress.
โBut it should serve as a warning of the reluctance to acknowledge the concept of same-sex marriage and the reality of same-sex couples living in Japan.
โWhile these cases work their way to the Supreme Court, the government can resolve this issue through legislation without further delay.
โThe Japanese government needs to be proactive in moving towards the legalisation of same-sex marriage so that couples can fully enjoy the same marriage rights as their heterosexual counterparts.ย ย ย
โJapan remains the only G7 country without legal recognition for same-sex couples. The law passed by the government in 2023 to promote understanding of LGBTI people is not enough.
โThere need to be solid, legal measures in place to protect same-sex couples and the LGBTI community in Japan from all forms of discrimination.โ
Previously, in 2024, Sapporo District Court in northern Japan came to an opposite conclusion and ruled the civil code which limits marriage to between a man and a woman is โunconstitutional [and] discriminatoryโ.
โEnacting same-sex marriage does not seem to cause disadvantages or harmful effects,โ the High Court said in its ruling, adding it was โstrongly expectedโ that parliament would โinstitutionalise an appropriate lawโ in the future.ย
โLiving in accordance with oneโs gender identity and sexual orientation is an inalienable right rooted in important personal interests,โ the court also said.
The Sapporo decision followed prior decisions by courts inย Nagoyaย and Tokyo โ a separate lawsuit to the one detailed above โ which also declared the ban unconstitutional.
What happens next?
Now that each of the six high court cases are completed, Japanโs highest court โ the Supreme Court of Japan โ is expected to manage the appeals and make a final decision on the matter.
Research has previously shown that most of the Japanese population is in favour of legalising same-sex marriage, with an opinion poll from 2023 revealing that two-thirds of Japanese people believe equal marriage should be legally recognised.
However, the legalisation of same-sex marriage still looks set to be a long way off, with Japanโs first female prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, has expressed opposition to same-sex marriage, describing it as a โvery difficult problemโ in the past.
What amazes me is how frightened straight cis hegemony is over anything that is different from how they live / perceive the world.ย ย They can’t seem to be able to live in a society with people who are different from them or how they live.ย ย It scares them to their core and makes them think the world is ending.ย They reject anything that moves from their past comfort zones.ย ย The idea of coexistence with others is emotionally shattering to them.ย ย They are so fragile.ย ย So small in their thinking.ย ย They need to make sure anything different is not seen as if removing all evidence of it makes it not exist anymore.ย That is so stupid I shouldn’t have to address it.ย ย But OK let me explain, in the 1950s the only representation of homosexuality was negative and strongly biased toward hating, yet gay kids were born to straight parents, the entire LGBTQ+ had no representation yet all existed.ย ย Hugs
Lawmakers in Kazakhstan are following the lead of Russian President Vladimir Putin with a bill to ban so-called โLGBTQ propagandaโ in the former Soviet republic.
The lower house of Kazakhstanโs parliament on Wednesday approved the measure outlawing โLGBT propagandaโ online and in the media, with fines mandated for violators, and up to 10 days in jail for repeat offenders,ย Reutersย reports.
The legislation now moves to the Kazakh senate, where itโs likely to pass.
President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has expressed support for the anti-LGBTQ+ bill, which, like similar laws passed inย Russia,ย Georgiaย and,ย Hungary, has been promoted as a bulwark against โdegenerateโ values imported from the West.
โChildren and teenagers are exposed to information online every day that can negatively impact their ideas about family, morality, and the future,โ Kazakh Education Minister Gani Beisembayev told lawmakers before the vote.
Deputy Irina Smirnovaย citedย library books and cartoonsย featuring same-sex relationships as examples of the โpropagandaโ addressed by the bill.
โI saw books in the library that promote LGBT, where a prince falls in love with a prince, two boys,โ she told lawmakers. โThere are cartoons that allow this to be shown, there are magazines and comics where all this is promoted.โย
For months, President Tokayev has lobbied hard for passage of the bill โย which is essentially copycat legislation of Russiaโs own โanti-LGBTQ propagandaโ measure โย stressing the need to uphold what he andย Putinย call their countriesโ โtraditional valuesโ.
Parties loyal to Tokayev dominate the lower house and voted unanimously in favor of the ban.
With the fall of theย Soviet Unionย in the 1990s, Kazakhstan legalized homosexuality as it drew politically closer to Europe and the West.
But while the Muslim-majority nation is officially secular, it remains deeply conservative when it comes to social issues. Withย Putinโs prodding, far-right politicians have exploited those social fissures to push the country back into Russiaโs sphere of influence.
โWe live in an independent and sovereign republic. Or are we already a colony of the Russian Federation?โ Zhanar Sekerbayeva, co-founder of the feminist initiative, Feminita,ย asked at a recent LGBTQ+ rights roundtableย in the country. ย
Arj Tursynkan, an activist with the NGO Education Community, explained that language in the legislation was sweeping.
โBecause of these amendments, people can be punished for anything โ jokes, drawings, hugs,โ he said.
The activist argued that the legislation is not just a legal text, but a test of Kazakhstanโs commitment to international norms of dignity and freedom.
Ahead of the vote, Belgium-based group International Partnership for Human Rights condemned the measure, saying it would โblatantly violate Kazakhstanโs international human rights commitments.โ
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Sarah Rainsford,Eastern and Southern Europe correspondentand
Guy Delauney,Balkans correspondent
AP Photo/Jerome Delay
Civilians risked their lives to cross Sarajevo’s main boulevard during the Bosnian war
The public prosecutor’s office in Milan has opened an investigation into claims that Italian citizens travelled to Bosnia-Herzegovina on “sniper safaris” during the war in the early 1990s.
Italians and others are alleged to have paid large sums to shoot at civilians in the besieged city of Sarajevo.
The Milan complaint was filed by journalist and novelist Ezio Gavazzeni, who describes a “manhunt” by “very wealthy people” with a passion for weapons who “paid to be able to kill defenceless civilians” from Serb positions in the hills around Sarajevo.
Different rates were charged to kill men, women or children, according to some reports.
More than 11,000 people died during the brutal four-year siege of Sarejevo.
Yugoslavia was torn apart by war and the city was surrounded by Serb forces and subjected to constant shelling and sniper fire.
Similar allegations about “human hunters” from abroad have been made several times over the years, but the evidence gathered by Gavazzeni, which includes the testimony of a Bosnian military intelligence officer, is now being examined by Italian counter terrorism prosecutor Alessandro Gobbis.
The charge is murder.
CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP
More than 11,000 civilians died in the siege of Sarajevo
The Bosnian officer apparently revealed that his Bosnian colleagues found out about the so-called safaris in late 1993 and then passed on the information to Italy’s Sismi military intelligence in early 1994.
The response from Sismi came a couple of months later, he said. They found out that “safari” tourists would fly from the northern Italian border city of Trieste and then travel to the hills above Sarajevo.
“We’ve put a stop to it and there won’t be any more safaris,” the officer was told, according to Ansa news agency. Within two to three months the trips had stopped.
Ezio Gavazzeni, who usually writes about terrorism and the mafia, first read about the sniper tours to Sarajevo three decades ago when Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported the story, but without firm evidence.
He returned to the topic after seeing “Sarajevo Safari”, a documentary film from 2022 by Slovenian director Miran Zupanic which alleges that those involved in the killings came from several countries, including the US and Russia as well as Italy.
Gavazzeni began to dig further and in February handed prosecutors his findings, said to amount to a 17-page file including a report by former Sarajevo mayor Benjamina Karic.
MICHAEL EVSTAFIEV/AFP
Snipers would shoot at civilians from areas controlled by the Bosnian Serbs overlooking Sarajevo
An investigation in Bosnia itself appears to have stalled.
Speaking to Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper, Gavazzeni alleges that “many” took part in the practice, “at least a hundred” in all, with Italians paying “a lot of money” to do so, up to โฌ100,000 (ยฃ88,000) in today’s terms.
In 1992, late Russian nationalist writer and politician Eduard Limonov was filmed firing multiple rounds into Sarajevo from a heavy machine gun.
He was being given a tour of hillside positions by Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, who was later convicted of genocide by an international tribunal in the Hague.
Limonov didn’t pay for his war tourism, though. He was there as an admirer of Karadzic, telling him: “We Russians should take example from you.”
Italian prosecutors and police are said to have identified a list of witnesses as they try to establish who might have been involved.
However, members of the British forces who served in Sarajevo in the 1990s have told the BBC that they never heard of any so-called “sniper tourism” during the Bosnian conflict.
They indicated that any attempts to bring in people from third countries who had paid to shoot at civilians in Sarajevo would have been “logistically difficult to accomplish”, due to the proliferation of checkpoints.
British forces served both inside Sarajevo and in the areas surrounding the city, where Serb forces were stationed and they saw nothing at the time to suggest that “sniper tourism” was taking place.
One soldier described the allegations that foreigners had paid to shoot at civilians as an “urban myth”.
Participants in a World AIDS Day event light candles along a red ribbon. | Shutterstock
The U.S. government will no longer commemorate December 1 as World AIDS Day, the State Departmentย recently notifiedย its workers. The U.S. has commemorated the international observance annually since 1988, including every year of the current presidentโs first term.
An email to State Department workers notified employees and grant recipients not to publicly promote the day โthrough any communication channels, including social media, media engagements, speeches or other public-facing messagingโ nor to use U.S. government funds towards any World AIDS Day observances,ย The New York Timesย reported.
The email said employees and grantees could still mention various anti-HIV programs and attend World AIDS Day events.
The email also reportedly said that the current U.S. governmentโs policy is โto refrain from messaging on any commemorative days, including World AIDS Day.โ However, the current president hasย signed proclamationsย for various awareness days and other commemorative observances.
World AIDS Day is an international day for raising awareness about HIV/AIDS, remembering those who have died from it, and celebrating progress in prevention, treatment, and care. Two World Health Organization (WHO) public information officers started World AIDS Day in 1988 as a way to raise awareness about the global health challenge.
The current administration hasย drastically cut federal fundingย for HIV prevention worldwide. An estimated 127,073 adult and 13,527 infant deathsย have been causedย by the effects of HIV/AIDS due to the current presidentโs cuts in funding for the Presidentโs Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), a program that has saved an estimated 25 to 26 million lives since its inception in 2003.
The State Department usually issues an annual PEPFAR report on World AIDS Day. Itโs unclear if the department will do so this year.
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Whistleblower Rutherford County Library Systems Director Luanne James claims the RCLS Board Chair, Cody York, instructed her to remove multiple books from the public library system without following the rules to do so.
James claimed York had checked out books he wanted banned and kept the books for so long they were marked as lost and then removed from the system. James also said York asked her to gather a list of library patronsโ personal information, including which books they checked out.
โNames of the patrons, their addresses, their ZIP codes, their barcodes, how many children and how many adults were in each household and what they were checking out,โ James told the RCLS Board Monday night.
According to RCLS, James was appointed as the new Library Director, which went into effect on July 28. James claimed she was at her job for only two days before she was instructed to remove books.
During Mondayโs meeting, York denied all Jamesโ allegations and denied any wrongdoing, saying he requested patronsโ ZIP codes to see which patrons lived outside the county so they could pay an additional $25 fee to hold a library card. With regard to the missing books, York shifted the blame back to James.
โDoes policy allow one board member or the chair to remove books?โ York asked James during the board meeting.
โNo,โ James replied.
โSo why did you do it [remove books]?โ York said. โโฆIโm not denying that I told you these books should not be in the library, but I canโt make a decision to remove them โ thatโs your decision.โ
A local advocacy group called theย Rutherford County Library Allianceย believes the following books listed are missing and had been removed from the library:
โForeverโ by Judy Blume
โOver the River and Through the Wood: A Holiday Adventureโ by Lisa Marie Francis Child
โThe Antiracist Kidโ by Tiffany Jewel
โMaking a Babyโ by Rachel Greener
News 2 hasnโt been able to independently confirm these specific titles are missing.
โIf a librarian has put a book in our library, itโs because our community needs it, so by bypassing all of the professionals and saying, โWell, I donโt like it, so it should go because I donโt want my kid reading it,โ that goes against the First Amendment,โ Keri Lambert, Vice President of the Rutherford County Library Alliance, told News 2.
โI believe itโs all driven by one motive only: to basically eliminate a certain class of people from the library collection as if they didnโt exist โฆ To figuratively put them back in the closet, if you will,โ Frank Lambert, a Library and Information Science Associate Professor at Middle Tennessee State University, told News 2.
News 2 reached out to Chair York, who responded with a statement:
โI categorically deny the allegations made against me last night.
The Rutherford County Library System has only two approved methods by which a title may be removed from the collection under our policies. Library staff may remove a title if it no longer meets the collection standard, such as relevance, condition, accuracy, or other established criteria, through the normal weeding process. A title may be removed by a vote of the Library Board, but only after the formal reconsideration process is completed. This process includes a written request, staff review, and a vote in an open public meeting.
Those are the only mechanisms permitted. No board member can direct the Executive Director to bypass either process. Raising questions about whether books in the collection meet our collection standards is not inappropriate.โ
When News 2 reached out to the whistleblower, Luanne James, we received an Out of Office email, indicating she may still be employed by the library system.