TNHarley
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- Sep 27, 2012
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Gay Flight Attendants Say No to Iran
For Dan Air, a gay 11-year veteran of the cabin crew of a British-based airline, the call for a boycott of Air Franceâs newly resumed Paris-Tehran route by one of its gay flight attendants is totally justified.
It could even be the start of more refusals to fly to countries like Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, and others where, like Iran, homosexuality is punishable by death, he said. âI'm completely and utterly behind them,â said Air, who uses a pseudonym when writing his blog, Confessions of a Trolley Dolly.
âI wouldnât be happy about flying to Tehran either,â he said. âWho wants to go to a country where you might be killed for being gay? You ought to be given the option of not going if you feel you could be unsafe. When youâre gay and take a job as a flight attendant, you know youâre going into a fairly hospitable environment. Itâs not like youâre working for a sports team. So to then be put in the position to fly to a place where they might kill you? No.â
At the same time, the head of Air Franceâs LGBT union told The Daily Beast on Wednesday that it was âludicrousâ for a gay flight attendant to demand the right not to work the Paris-Tehran flight.
âIf they donât want to fly to Tehran, why not refuse to fly to the 20 other destinations Air France flies to where there are anti-gay laws?â said SĂ©bastien Gidon, president of the union PersonnâAiles. âI think this is the work of one isolated person and it doesnât necessarily reflect the majority of gay flight attendants.â
Air France recently announced that it will resume thrice-weekly flights to Iran from Paris next week after an eight-year hiatus due to international sanctions.
Problems first arose a week ago, when female flight attendants and female pilots were angered by a memo saying theyâd have to wear head scarves when exiting the plane in Tehran. Air France, in a compromise negotiated with the unions, eventually agreed to let female flight attendants opt out of the Iran flights if they wantedâwithout retribution.
But the airline has not yet responded to an open letter written to the French government and Air France CEO FrĂ©dĂ©ric Gagey this week by a man calling himself âLaurent Mâ with the title âGay stewards from Air France donât want to fly to the death penalty in Iran.â
âOur sexuality isnât written on our passports and it doesnât change how we work as a crew,â Laurent M wrote. âBut it is inconceivable to force someone to go to a country where people of his kind are condemned for who they are.â
The letter says that homosexuality in Iran is illegal and comes with a penalty of 74 lashes for a minor, while adults can be executed.
A petition launched at the same time had more than 15,000 signatures by Wednesday night.
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Such intolerance! I bet those bigoted gays live in Mississippi!
For Dan Air, a gay 11-year veteran of the cabin crew of a British-based airline, the call for a boycott of Air Franceâs newly resumed Paris-Tehran route by one of its gay flight attendants is totally justified.
It could even be the start of more refusals to fly to countries like Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, and others where, like Iran, homosexuality is punishable by death, he said. âI'm completely and utterly behind them,â said Air, who uses a pseudonym when writing his blog, Confessions of a Trolley Dolly.
âI wouldnât be happy about flying to Tehran either,â he said. âWho wants to go to a country where you might be killed for being gay? You ought to be given the option of not going if you feel you could be unsafe. When youâre gay and take a job as a flight attendant, you know youâre going into a fairly hospitable environment. Itâs not like youâre working for a sports team. So to then be put in the position to fly to a place where they might kill you? No.â
At the same time, the head of Air Franceâs LGBT union told The Daily Beast on Wednesday that it was âludicrousâ for a gay flight attendant to demand the right not to work the Paris-Tehran flight.
âIf they donât want to fly to Tehran, why not refuse to fly to the 20 other destinations Air France flies to where there are anti-gay laws?â said SĂ©bastien Gidon, president of the union PersonnâAiles. âI think this is the work of one isolated person and it doesnât necessarily reflect the majority of gay flight attendants.â
Air France recently announced that it will resume thrice-weekly flights to Iran from Paris next week after an eight-year hiatus due to international sanctions.
Problems first arose a week ago, when female flight attendants and female pilots were angered by a memo saying theyâd have to wear head scarves when exiting the plane in Tehran. Air France, in a compromise negotiated with the unions, eventually agreed to let female flight attendants opt out of the Iran flights if they wantedâwithout retribution.
But the airline has not yet responded to an open letter written to the French government and Air France CEO FrĂ©dĂ©ric Gagey this week by a man calling himself âLaurent Mâ with the title âGay stewards from Air France donât want to fly to the death penalty in Iran.â
âOur sexuality isnât written on our passports and it doesnât change how we work as a crew,â Laurent M wrote. âBut it is inconceivable to force someone to go to a country where people of his kind are condemned for who they are.â
The letter says that homosexuality in Iran is illegal and comes with a penalty of 74 lashes for a minor, while adults can be executed.
A petition launched at the same time had more than 15,000 signatures by Wednesday night.
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Such intolerance! I bet those bigoted gays live in Mississippi!