Bangladesh's
first comic strip featuring a young lesbian discovering her sexuality has been
launched in the capital to raise awareness of the plight of gays in the
conservative Muslim-majority nation.
Boys of
Bangladesh, the country's largest gay rights group, organised the launch on
Saturday night of "Dhee", the Bengali word for intellect or wisdom.
"By
creating Dhee, we want to shape perception of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender) people, because we should be free to choose whom to love,"
Mehnaz Khan, one of the four content developers of the comic, told AFP.
"It's
about carrying the message to all."
Gays and
lesbians suffer discrimination and worse in Bangladesh where homosexuality is a
crime punishable by a maximum life term, although prosecutions are rare.
The comic,
to be handed out at gay rights seminars and other events, tells the story of
Dhee, a girl who is attracted to other girls and falls in love.
Facing
intense pressure to conform, Dhee mulls her enormous challenges and asks
readers whether she should consider suicide, marry a man to please her family,
flee the country, or stay and follow her heart.
Several
hundred people attended the launch at the British Council in Dhaka, although
entry was carefully scrutinised in case of protests by conservative hardliners.
"We
hope to take such events outdoors next time as we don't want to live our lives
indoors and in secret," prominent social activist Khushi Kabir said.
Many gays
and lesbians are forced to hide their sexual identity and live double lives for
fear of reprisals in the deeply conservative country where 90 percent of the
population is Muslim.
But in
recent years, Bangladesh's young gay men have become increasingly assertive of
their rights and have held low-key pride marches at the last two Bengali new
year festivals.
Last year,
the first magazine for homosexuals was launched with little opposition.


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