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China: Gay Life Legal, But Still in the Closet

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

It’s past midnight and hundreds of men pack Destination. They talk in smoky corridors, move to the beat on a crowded dance floor and play shirtless around a dance pole. Destination is a lot like any number of gay bars in the United States, but outside of the club, it’s a different world for gays in China.

Openness about homosexuality is seen by some as too much of a refutation of the Communist Party line in a country where men are pressured by the government and tradition to marry and father a child, gays say. Gay festivals are shut down and websites closed, and laws preventing discrimination do not exist. “If something’s different and you publicly promote it, (the authorities) worry it could get out of control and threaten their harmonious society,” says Bin Xu, director of Common Language, a lesbian, gay and transgender support group based in Beijing.

In January, authorities canceled the Mr. Gay China pageant an hour before it was to start. Police in Songzhuang, an artist’s colony in the suburbs of Beijing, sought last year to shut down a gay arts exhibition, which Xu’s group helped organize, because it was deemed “not proper,” Xu says. She negotiated with authorities and was allowed to hold the event after taking down four paintings.

Full Story from USA Today
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Hong Kong: Gay Rights on the Horizon?

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

With the successful staging of Hong Kong’s second Pride parade on 1 November this event is now firmly established as a regular yearly highpoint. The march through central areas of Hong Kong Island was almost twice as big as last year’s debut, attracting almost 2,000 participants. Connie Chan, who is chairperson of the Women’s Council of Hong Kong and Chief Director of Hong Kong Pride Parade Committee 2009, spoke to chinaworker.info about the struggle for gay rights in this ‘special autonomous region’ of China, where homophobia is still a big problem and the legal standing of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) people lags some way behind their position in other advanced capitalist countries.

“There is still no discrimination law in Hong Kong, to protect people in fields such as employment on the basis of their sexual orientation,” says Connie Chan when I met her at the office of Rainbow, a collective for young gay men. The office is a hive of activity in the days just before Pride. “This [anti-discrimination law] is something we have wanted for 20 years,” she adds. Hong Kong’s current legislation does not cover discrimination beyond government authorities, in areas such as employment or the provision of goods and services.

“There is also a lot of talk about same-sex marriage, which is a hot issue all over the world,” Connie explains, pointing out that among Hong Kong’s LGBT activists there are differing views on the subject, with some opposing marriage or – like herself – advocating the right to civil partnership for gays and lesbians.

Full Story from China Worker: http://chinaworker.info/en/content/news/890/

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To subscribe to this blog, use the rss feed on the right, or use the form at right to join our email list. You can also email us at info@purpleunions.com. Or find us on Facebook – just search for Gay Marriage Watch (you’ll see our b/w wedding pic overlooking the Ferry Building and Bay Bridge in SF). We’re also tweeting daily at http://www.twitter.com/gaymarriagewatc.