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Polish PM: More Gays Bad for Society
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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Apr 26 2007, 11:40 pm
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Thu, 26 Apr 2007 20:40:17 -0700
Local: Thurs, Apr 26 2007 11:40 pm
Subject: Polish PM: More Gays Bad for Society
*Perilous Times and Decaying Morality

Polish PM: More Gays Bad for Society*

By RYAN LUCAS
The Associated Press
Thursday, April 26, 2007; 3:32 PM

WARSAW, Poland -- Poland's conservative prime minister rejected European
Union criticism Thursday of a proposal to fire teachers for "homosexual
propaganda," saying it was not in the interest of society to have more
gay people.

Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski said homosexuals did not face
discrimination in his country, responding to an EU parliament vote to
send a mission to Poland to investigate recent anti-gay comments by
senior officials.

"Nobody is limiting gay rights in Poland," Kaczynski told reporters
hours after the vote.

"However, if we're talking about not having homosexual propaganda in
Polish schools, I fully agree with those who feel this way," he said.
"Such propaganda should not be in schools; it definitely doesn't serve
youth well."

"It's not in the interest of any society to increase the number of
homosexuals _ that's obvious."

Last month, Deputy Education Minister Miroslaw Orzechowski said teachers
deemed to be promoting "homosexual culture" in schools would be fired,
and the ministry announced it would draw up corresponding legislation.

The ministry has not defined what it means by efforts to promote
homosexuality and has yet to submit the legislation, according to the
parliamentary press office.

The EU parliament called on Polish authorities to publicly condemn and
take measures against declarations by officials "inciting discrimination
and hatred based on sexual orientation."

The assembly asked the EU's anti-racism center in Vienna to look into
"the emerging climate of racist, xenophobic and homophobic intolerance
in Poland," and to determine whether the bloc's anti-discrimination
rules were being violated.

The resolution _ sponsored by the Socialists, Liberals and Greens but
largely opposed by conservative lawmakers _ was likely to strain
EU-Poland relations further. Since joining the EU in 2004, Poland has
clashed with the bloc on a variety of issues, from the environment to
the economy.

The vast majority of Poland's 38 million people are members of the Roman
Catholic church, which considers homosexual behavior sinful. Kaczynski's
Law and Justice party, which won parliamentary elections in September
2005, has stressed Catholic values. The party governs with the small,
right-wing League of Polish Families, which is militantly anti-abortion
and anti-gay rights.

Robert Biedron, the head of Poland's Campaign Against Homophobia,
condemned Kaczynski's statements, calling them "old homophobic comments,
full of hatred and intolerance toward homosexuals."

"It's an old tune from this government," he said.

During a visit to Germany earlier this year, Education Minister Roman
Giertych, the leader of the League of Polish Families, said "one must
limit homosexual propaganda so that children won't have an improper view
of family."

Human Rights Watch has sent a letter to Kaczynski saying it fears the
measure would bar safe sex education and lead to the expulsion or
dropping out of gay students.

President Lech Kaczynksi _ the prime minister's brother _ refused to
grant parade permits for gay rights marches while he served as mayor of
Warsaw, although a gathering was held anyway, in front of his office.

___

Associated Press Writer Jan Sliva contributed to this report from
Strasbourg, France.


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