Bhutan's
LGBT community celebrated Saturday after the tiny Himalayan kingdom's
parliament became the world's latest to decriminalise homosexuality.
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| Bhutan's National Council will vote on Monday to pass the bill following the move by the lower house of parliament to decriminalise homosexuality AFP/Arun SANKAR |
THIMPU:
Bhutan's LGBT community celebrated Saturday (Jun 8) after the tiny Himalayan
kingdom's parliament became the world's latest to decriminalise homosexuality.
The lower
house overwhelmingly voted late Friday to repeal two sections of the 2004
criminal code which made "unnatural sex" illegal.
"A lot
of us cried," said Tashi Tsheten of Rainbow Bhutan that represents the
country's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.
"We
are a small and marginalised community and when our rights are discussed in
parliament, it makes us extremely happy," Tashi said.
The law had
never been used, but Finance Minister Namgay Tshering, who submitted the
recommendation to repeal sections 213 and 214 of the penal code, said they had
become "a stain" on the country's reputation.
Namgay
Tshering said the sections had become redundant since Bhutan became a
constitutional monarchy in 2008. "There is a high degree of acceptability
of the LGBT community in our society," he said.
The
minister added that he was optimistic that the code sections would be
definitively scrapped when the upper house in the country of 750,000 people
votes on Monday.
Tashi said
some ministers had been social workers with contacts in the LGBT community and
Prime Minister Lotay Tshering is a surgeon. "So we had lot of hopes in
this government."
There is no
annual Gay Pride rally or other public display in Bhutan.
And while
Tashi said there was a general acceptance of transgenders, especially in rural
areas, they still face much discrimination, especially in schools.
"There
are lots of barriers and our education system does not understand LGBT,"
Tashi said, adding that most LGBT youths drop out of school.
Once the
bill is passed by the National Council, the upper chamber, it will be sent for
royal assent.

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