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Gay Africans and Arabs embrace blogging

Ernst-Jan Written on February 19, 2008 – 3:21 pm
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief

Yesterday, Reuters published an article that provides another interesting view on the advantages of blogging. Editors Andrew Dobbie and Sara Ledwith have interviewed several gay Africans and Arabs about how blogs allow them to discuss and describe what they have to hide in daily life. As homosexual acts are illegal in most countries in Africa and the Middle East. Some leaders, like President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, even deny the existence of gays.

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“If you haven’t heard or seen any gays in Sudan then allow me to tell you ‘You Don’t live In The Real World then,’” Sudanese blogger Ali wrote in a message to other Sudanese bloggers on his blog Black Gay Arab. The blogging scene have become one of the safes ways for suppressed men like Ali to meet. Gug, writer behind the blog GayUganda, told Reuters that he ‘looked around for others until I found others’. Gug: “Oh yes, I do love the Internet, and I guess it is a tool that has made us gay Ugandans and Africans get out of our villages and realize that the parish priest’s homophobia is not universal opinion. Surprise, surprise!”

This blog was created to allow access to the psyche of me, who represents the thousands of us who are unrepresented

Next to supportive comments, the gay bloggers also receive hostile messages. Yet they keep up their diaries and news blogs, proving to their fellow citizens that African and Arab gays do exist. As a Kenyan man says on Ali’s blog: “The Kenyan gay man is a myth and you may never meet one in your lifetime. However, I and many others like me do exist; just not openly. This blog was created to allow access to the psyche of me, who represents the thousands of us who are unrepresented.”

I hope you like that post!

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What year is it?

Boris Written on January 1, 2008 – 10:55 am
Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten,

Every year it takes webmasters a few days (or months!) to realize that it is a new year and they should update the copyright notices at the bottom of their websites. I know, it is trivial, but I just can’t help but smile when I see the most expensive and well watched frontpage of the world display ‘2007′ when it is actually 2008

Google and Yahoo: both wrong
Google Yahoo!

CNN and Reuters: Reuters wins!
CNN.com - Breaking News, U.S., World, Weather, Entertainment & Video News http://www.reuters.com/info/copyright

Wired and Techcrunch: both wrong
Wired News Techcrunch

Apple and Microsoft: sorry Apple fans, both wrong
Microsoft Corporation Apple

See any other funny examples of outdated websites?

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