Jakarta Globe – AFP, August 4, 2013
Hanoi. Some two hundred activists waving rainbow flags and carrying hand-painted banners biked in a colourful convoy through central Hanoi Sunday as part of the communist country’s second gay pride parade.
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| Participants attend Vietnam’s second gay pride parade in Hanoi August 4, 2013. (Reuters Photo/Kham) |
Hanoi. Some two hundred activists waving rainbow flags and carrying hand-painted banners biked in a colourful convoy through central Hanoi Sunday as part of the communist country’s second gay pride parade.
Participants
said they hoped to reduce prejudice and discrimination against the Lesbian Gay
Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community in Vietnam, where Confucian social
mores — with their emphasis on tradition and family — still dominate.
“I want
society to accept us and I am proud of myself,” said 17-year-old participant Vu
Ngoc Anh, a highschool student.
“We hope
people will understand more about the LGBT community… as being a homosexual is
nothing bad,” Anh, who is herself a lesbian, told AFP at the parade.
Organized
by Hanoi’s increasingly visible LGBT community, the event went ahead
peacefully.
Police
watched the activists as they gathered with bicycles and motorbikes in front of
a statue of Russian communist leader Lenin in the city center, but made no move
to stop them despite their lack of official permission.
Vietnam
normally tightly restricts demonstrations.
The
country’s first ever gay pride parade was held a year ago.
Homosexuality
remains largely taboo in Vietnam, with gay people routinely portrayed in the
media as comical figures or as suffering from a condition that can be treated.
The country
forbids same-sex unions but authorities are considering lifting the ban.
Gay rights
have attracted high level support, with both the health and justice ministries
coming out in support of lifting the ban on same-sex unions or even legalizing
gay marriage.
“In terms
of human rights, people of the same sex have the rights to live… to love and
pursue happiness,” said Nguyen Viet Tien, deputy minister of health was quoted
as saying on state media in April.
The law on
marriage and family is due to be debated at the National Assembly later this
year and any move to legalise gay unions would make Vietnam the first country
in Asia to do so.
The move to
lift the ban shows “a change in attitude of the state on the issue”, civil law
official Duong Dang Hue told the Dan Tri online newspaper.
Public
opinion on LGBTs in Vietnam is changing “really fast”, said Le Do Nga Linh, 29,
a participant at the parade.
“I hope
that we can get permission and have gay marriage really soon,” she added.
Experts
have highlighted the fact that going easy on gay rights — which do not threaten
the communist party’s control — may be a way for the authoritarian government
to gloss over its otherwise poor rights record.
Agence France-Presse
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