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Homosexuelle Initiative (HOSI) Wien, Austrias
oldest and most important lesbian and gay organisation, is condemning
the move of the Christian-Democratic Party ÖVP to go into a coalition
government with the right-wing and extremist Freedom Party FPÖ whose
leaders and politicians have made a series of racist, xenophobic and anti-democratic
statements in the past. The Freedom Party has also led an extremely populist
and xenophobic electoral campaign last year.

Vienna, Ballhausplatz, the seat of the Federal
Chancellery and the Federal Presidents Office: Gays protested against
the swearing-in of the new coalition government on 4 February 2000
HOSI Wien has a long history of fighting against the
anti-homosexual politics and attitudes both of the ÖVP and the FPÖ.
These conservative and reactionary forces have been instrumental in denying
to Austrias lesbians and gay men full equality and human rights.
Both parties are equally responsible for continuous legal and social discrimination.
HOSI Wien joins the protests in Austria against this
coalition government. We had already signed the resolution of the Democratic
Initiative organising the huge demonstration held in Vienna on 12
November 1999 against the attempts to form such a coalition.

Lesbian and gay activists were visible in many
demonstrations carrying rainbow flags, to which black mourning-crapes
were tied.
The FPÖ is not a new phenomenon, the party has
been around for decades, from 1983 to 1986 (until Haider became party
leader) it was junior coalition partner of the Socialist Party (SPÖ).
The FPÖ is represented in the provincial governments of most of the
bundesländer. Haider has also been around for more than a
decade, we all have got used to his way of making politics.
The new aspect now is that the Christian-democrats enabled
Haiders FPÖ to become part of the federal government. The blame
for this new situation, therefore, must be on the ÖVP only. This
party is our real enemy, the real evil that has caused the present disaster
by its desperate attempt to win the chancellery.
Read a summary of HOSI
Wien's press release on that matter
The Rosa Lila Villa, Vienna's originally squatted
lesbian and gay house, has been decorated with a huge banner: "The
pink purple villa against blue-black waves", this play with colours
makes allusions to the party colours of the OeVP (black) and FPOe (blue)
the word "waves" being pained in brown colour refers
to old and new nazis..
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THE
ANTI-HOMOSEXUAL RECORD OF ÖVP AND FPÖ
Haider
himself has never made homophobic statements. But there are several
politicians in his party, both at local, regional and national levels,
who have made strong homophobic statements, as have made politicians
of the ÖVP.
In
some instances, the FPÖ has been more supportive than the ÖVP.
In November 1996, when the reform of three anti-homosexual provisions
in the Austrian penal code was on the agenda of the Parliament,
the FPÖ voted in favour of repealing the ban on gay and lesbian
organisations (Article 221) while the ÖVP voted against. At
that time, also the ban on positive information (Article 220) was
lifted, however only by one vote because some of the FPÖ deputies
missed the voting while. The party line of both the ÖVP and
the FPÖ was to keep this provision in the law book. The attempt
to abolish the discriminatory age of consent for male gay sex of
18 years (Article 209) failed because both ÖVP and FPÖ,
who together had a majority also in the previous Parliament, voted
against the repeal. In a provocative move, the FPÖ then proposed
to lower the age of consent for gay men to 16. This bill failed
because the social-democrats and the Green Party followed the advice
of the gay and lesbian movement and voted against it. Since the
heterosexual and lesbian age of consent is 14, it would only have
replaced a discriminatory provision by another one. The movement
feared that such a half-hearted step would be cemented for many
decades.
NEGATIVE EFFECTS
Certainly,
a coalition between ÖVP and FPÖ will have very negative
repercussions on lesbians and gays in Austria because it will mean
complete stagnation with regard to law reform. Article 209 will
persist, there are still 20 convictions a year, and people still
go to jail. We can also forget any plans for registered partnership
in the years of such a coalition.
However,
for gays and lesbians, the Christian-democrats are worse than the
FPÖ. They have blocked law reform also in the coalition with
the social-democrats because, as mentioned before, also in the previous
Parliament the ÖVP held a majority together with the FPÖ.
The ÖVP is also more dogmatic and fanatic in its anti-homosexuality
while the FPÖ might be more susceptible to arguments.
Concrete
deterioration will also occur in terms of subsidies to gay and lesbian
projects. The movement of course will survive because it luckily
has never been dependent on funding from the federal government.
HOSI Wien has received funding from social-democratic ministries
in the past to carry out, for instance, projects with ILGA-Europe.
Such funding will certainly stop now.
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