Thursday, October 20, 2005

Gay Rights Group Can't Protest At U.S. Naval Academy

SoulforceANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND - A gay rights group planning to protest the military's ban on openly gay service members at the U.S. Naval Academy has been told protesters will be arrested if they step on campus.
The gay rights group, Soulforce, planned to bring about 60 protesters to the Annapolis gates of the Naval Academy Friday, with the goal of getting inside and talking to midshipmen about the military's stance on gay service members.
Naval Academy officials told the group they won't be allowed on campus, calling the protest a "disruption."
"Our policy is to decline any special interest groups from coming aboard the academy to advocate their own causes, business interests and advance personal agendas," academy spokesman Cmdr. Rod Gibbons said in a statement.
The Soulforce group vowed to walk on campus anyway, setting up a possible showdown.
"If they don't let us on campus, some of us will get arrested," said Jacob Reitan, director of Equality Ride, part of Soulforce.
"The gay and lesbian community has to show the severity of Don't Ask, Don't Tell," Reitan told The (Annapolis) Capital. "We are going to come on campus; we are going to walk in ... like any normal visitor."
Soulforce organizers say they wrote to the Naval Academy's superintendent, Vice Adm. Rodney P. Rempt, on Aug. 18, asking to meet with him, and again on Oct. 10, announcing their intent to enter the campus and discuss gay rights with midshipmen and professors.
Navy Capt. Helen F. Dunn, deputy superintendent and chief of staff, responded to last week's letter, writing, "Be advised that accessing the academy grounds for the purpose of protesting or engaging midshipmen, faculty and staff, may subject you to arrest and prosecution by the appropriate federal authorities."
Reitan said the gay rights group has a city permit to gather outside the academy's gates and that protesters will attempt to walk inside at lunchtime.
Citing security concerns, an academy spokesman declined to say if police will be on hand for the event.
One of the protesters will be Tommie Watkins, a former midshipman now living in Florida. Watkins was expelled from the Naval Academy in 1997 after being outed as gay. Watkins published a book this month, "Living Out Loud," and said there are more closeted gay and lesbian midshipmen.
"I am just one case of many," Watkins told the newspaper.
The protest is part of a series of "Equality Rides" events that Soulforce plans to organize at colleges and universities that expel students who are openly gay. The group also plans protests at the Air Force Academy, West Point and the Coast Guard Academy.
from Newsday

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