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29 May 2013

Chelsea Clinton speaks out for gay equality during Malaysia visit

The only child of former US President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says she's committed to supporting gay rights and being more involved in international world health issues during a visit to Malaysia this week.


Chelsea Clinton at the Women Deliver conference in Kuala Lumpur. 
Photo: Facebook

Speaking to the The Associated Press during a visit to Malaysia, Chelsea Clinton, who's already known to be a LGBT equality advocate, said she plans to speak out for gay rights and to become more involved in the international health projects of her father's foundation.

Clinton was speaking on the sidelines of the Women Deliver conference in Kuala Lumpur after visiting Burma earlier this week. Her father's Clinton Foundation will be working with authorities in Burma to distribute medicine and health products, including HIV drugs and child vaccines, at cheaper prices.

She was quoted in the AP interview that besides the Clinton Foundation's initiatives, she was committed to supporting gay rights, including marriage equality.

"It just seems so fundamental to me. I'm able to marry the person I wanted to marry," Clinton said. "That's the fundamental human imperative. Those of us who have been lucky enough should expand these rights to others." She is married to investment banker Marc Mezvinsky.

The report further noted that the younger Clinton often tweets messages supportive of gay rights. Earlier this month, she called it "progress" when France's new gay marriage law came into force and urged her followers to help build "an equitable world for all" while marking International Day Against Homophobia.

Last year, Clinton, as an NBC News special correspondent and supporter of LGBT equality, challenged anti-gay pastor Rick Warren on his opposition to marriage equality.

When Warren suggested that Clinton’s (and other journalists') questions are part of a “hidden agenda,” she responded saying: "It’s not a hidden agenda. But in a year in which we had equal marriage in different ways on the ballot, and now after those votes, there’s equal marriage rights in nine out of our 50 states, and a majority of Americans now said in 2012 that we as a country support equal marriage largely, I think that’s why people keep asking you."

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

讀者回應

1. 2013-05-30 05:07  
i doubt, she is heard. most malays are hypocrites themselves, so why tell them to treat homosexuals equally.
2. 2013-05-30 08:30  
Don't waste your precious time in this backward country as far as human rights and civil liberties are concerned. They will arrest you under the Seditions Act if you talk too much...
3. 2013-05-30 11:53  
President Clinton was one of my favorite presidents even with
the Monica Lewinski scandal. To see his daughter becoming
an advocate for LGBT issues is a great thing. However, I do not
really think she understands the Malaysian governments
draconian laws regarding gays. I find it hilarious how the
Malaysian and Indonesian government fear "Lady Gaga" more
than Chelsea Clinton. She would probably enjoy being
arrested under the Sedition Act because it would create a
diplomatic nightmare for Malaysia. I have been to Malaysia
the gay people are wonderful but still have to live with a
repressive government.
4. 2013-05-30 21:54  
Someone has to start. We should all feel proud and honored Chelsea Clinton, came all the way to this part of the world to bravely address it.

May the ripple for the rights to love whom we choose reverberate into waves of tsunami. Asian souls are supposed to be peace loving and all embracing. Let live and love. Peace.
5. 2013-05-31 03:39  
I appreciate her words, yet I can't help feeling a little saddened as well. After all, when so few among us declare ourselves to our families, to the people from whom we should reasonably expect understanding and acceptance before all others, then why should or would we expect understanding and acceptance from those less meaningful in our lives? And so, why would we ever expect a government, just or repressive, to recognize a trait we say is natural and reasonable that many of us lack the courage and conviction to fully accept in ourselves.

I've heard LGBT rights compared to the Civil Rights movement in the US. Yet, only the lightest-skinned persons of African descent could purposely avoid their natural and reasonable trait of skin color. By "blending in", a gay man or woman implicitly supports bigotry and denial of natural rights to other LGBTs. So, I guess I am saddened that many of us rely on and even expect the openness and fair-mindedness of people like Ms. Clinton to stand up for us when many among us choose to hide even from those we love and who love us (or at least the "us" we pretend to be).
6. 2013-05-31 06:28  
Hurrah that Chelsea speaks up for gay equality in Malaysia even though it will probably be omitted in the main stream media. Malaysia is a wannabe high-income -developed country but it does not want to know anything about human-rights or equal rights; all it cares about is money and development , and screw everything else.
7. 2013-06-02 00:10  
@substitute It is easier to point fingers to a particular race for being hypocrite and generalising the entire race for the action of a few. Such racist behaviour should not have happened within our own community as we all know too well the danger of discrimination.
8. 2013-06-02 04:00  
@isaacrizard, perhaps @substitute meant 'Malaysians', not just the Malays. As far as I know, foreigners sometimes refer to Malaysians as Malays until I (or someone else) point out their mistake :)
9. 2013-06-02 05:26  
beware the clintons. ALL of them. NONE of them know what speaking TRUTH is or means.

remember; her mother ignored the requests from, what she claimed, was her friend when the lybians killed her "friend" and gay state department worker.

you all are kidding yourselves, and empowering white trash.
wake up
10. 2013-06-02 08:55  
#9. Well that was a well reasoned and thoughtful statement. From what strata of "white" do you come to colour others with those words?
11. 2013-06-03 07:00  
Well, no body cares about Chinese, Malays or Indian Malaysians abroad. I am known as Malay by most of my friends in Europe and in other parts of Asia too. I am Malaysian. Apart of that, going back to what Chelsea claimed, it's useless to educate these people here. She came to the wrong country. We need to work on racial segregation here, women's rights and poverty than gay rights. Since the election in May, we realized that there is so much s*** in the Government controlled by the National Party. We need to work on that as 1 People.
12. 2013-06-04 02:17  
#11. It is always "useful" to call out discrimination wherever it is found and in whatever the form. Silence and not meeting intolerance head on, is the enemy.

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