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HOMOPHOBIA

Paris newspaperman sparks homophobia row after refusing to sell magazine with men kissing

Paris’ famed newspaper kiosks made the headlines earlier this year when one was burned down during a “yellow vest” protest and donors around the world gave thousands of euros to help its manager rebuild his business. By Rory Mulholland.

Paris newspaperman sparks homophobia row after refusing to sell magazine with men kissing
The Paris kiosk at République where the offending magazine was allegedly removed from sale. Photo: Rory Mulholland

Now the kiosks are back in the news – but this time they’re getting very bad publicity.

One kiosquier, as they are known in French, is accused of refusing to sell customers a magazine because a picture of two male water poloists kissing passionately in a swimming pool.

Mediakiosk, the company that manages all kiosks in Paris, has shut down the one in question on Place de la République, suspended its manager, and launched an enquiry into whether or not he is guilty of homophobia.

The affair began last Saturday when a customer reported going to the kiosk to buy the sporting daily L’Equipe, which at the weekend comes with a glossy magazine which in its latest edition carried the picture of the men embracing with the headline “Kiss whoever you want.”

Inside was a long article on homophobia in sport.

READ ALSO: John Lichfield to hand over €13k raised for Paris kiosk owners hit by yellow vest violence

The customer, named as Grégory Tilhac, said he asked the kiosquier for a copy, the man said he had none, but then admitted that he had not taken them out of the cardboard box they had arrived in.

“Are you homophobic?” Tilhac asked, according to an account he later published on Facebook.

“Yes,” came the alleged reply.

“Unabashed homophobia in all its horror,” wrote the customer, whose account was widely relayed on Twitter and soon came to the attention of the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo.

She tweeted that it was “unacceptable” and vowed to do all she could to battle “homophobic acts and words”.

Mediakiosk, which runs the kiosk, told France Info radio that it would conduct an inquiry into what happened and would question the kiosquier on Tuesday, but said that the kiosquier in question had rejected the allegations.

Deputy Paris mayor Olivia Polski said he had been suspended.

The alleged incident comes after a series of homophobic attacks in the French capital, with a spike last autumn in assaults that gained a lot of media coverage partly because some victims decided to share their experience with a photograph of their injuries on social media.

The increase in attacks on homosexuals over the past year in France, where gay marriage has been legal since 2013, led to the country dropping a whopping 11 places in just a year in an annual gay travel index.

The Spartacus Gay Travel Index 2019 puts France in 17th place, down from sixth place a year ago.

READ ALSO 

The kiosk that sparked the latest controversy was closed when The Local went to visit it on Monday, but the owners of other kiosks on the vast Place de la République had plenty to say on the subject.

“He has no right to try and censor things like that. I see men kissing on the footpath in front of my kiosk and that is their business,” said the kiosquier whose newspaper stand is directly opposite the one at the centre of the minor media storm. He did not want his name published.

Kamel, another kiosquier on the square, said he thought his colleague might be the innocent victim of a plot to stir up anti-Muslim sentiment, even if he wasn’t sure that the accused man was a Muslim.

“It’s the gay lobby that wants people to talk about it,” he said,

Porn mags are on open display in most kiosks in Paris.

He said that he couldn’t believe the man could be so stupid as to refuse to sell L’Equipe.

“He’s a businessman, It would not be in his interest,” he said, arguing that the kiosquier most likely sold porn mags so it would be unlikely that he would refuse to sell a magazine that merely showed two gay men kissing.

The Local could not verify that the shuttered kiosk at République did indeed sell porn, but all four other kiosks visited at random stocked a wide selection of sex magazines with naked women in lascivious positions on the front page.

The kiosk at the centre of the controversy in question lies about 20 metres away from a gym that is popular with the gay community.

Benoit Dufrene, 46, a part-time Parisian who breeds dogs in Burgundy, said he was shocked by reports that the kiosquier had refused to sell the L’Equipe magazine.

”It’s obvious that we need to fight to make sure that homophobic acts such as these stop happening,” he said.

 

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HOMOPHOBIA

Youth admits vicious gay attack story that shocked Spain was a lie

A young man who claimed eight masked assailants carved a homophobic slur on his buttocks in Madrid in broad daylight, sparking an outcry, has admitted he lied, Spain's Interior Ministry said Wednesday.

Youth admits vicious gay attack story that shocked Spain was a lie
Photo: Curto de la Torre/AFP

The 20-year-old told police he was attacked on Sunday at the entrance to his apartment building in the trendy Malasana district near the Spanish capital’s lively gay heighbourhood.

He claimed the assailants cut his lower lip with a knife then scored the word “maricón”, meaning “faggot” into his buttocks, while spewing homophobic attacks.

But on Wednesday he “decided to rectify his initial statement and said the injuries allegedly inflicted had been consensual,” an interior ministry source told AFP.

The alleged attack came just two months after a young gay man was beaten to death in northern Spain in another suspected homophobic attack and it drew a sharp rebuke from Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

The premier said there was “no place for hatred” and he called an urgent meeting for Friday of Spain’s commission against hate crimes.

Leftist parties and rights groups also accused far-right party Vox of encouraging homophobic attacks with its vocal opposition to gay rights.

News that the young man, who has not been identified, had changed his story sparked a flurry of reaction.

Equality Minister Irene Montero tweeted that “hate crimes against LGBTI people rose 43 percent during the first half of 2021” over the same period last year.

She urged people not to focus on the “tree which hides the forest”.

Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said it was “anecdotal” that the man had changed his story “because hate crimes have risen”.

“And obviously there is public conduct, online behaviour which encourage hate crimes, lets not trivialise,” he told private television La Sexta.

But Javier Giner, a film director and gay activist, lashed out at the youth, saying he had done “unnecessary and gratuitous harm to all victims of homophobic attacks and to everyone who fights to end them.”

Two months ago Samuel Luiz, 24, was beaten to death near a nightclub in the northern city of Coruna in an attack denounced by Sanchez as “savage and merciless”. It brought huge crowds onto the streets in protest.

A protest called for Wednesday night in central Madrid in response to the supposed attack would still take place, organisers said. 

READ MORE: Is Spain really a tolerant country when it comes to LGBTQ+ people?

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