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LGBT+ protest in front of Queen and Prime Minister

Protesters call to end criminalisation of LGBT people in 37 Commonwealth states outside Commonwealth Day service at Westminster Abbey.

Eighty LGBT+ rights defenders protested as Her Majesty the Queen, the UK Prime Minister, Theresa May MP and Commonwealth High Commissioners celebrated Commonwealth Day 2018 at Westminster Abbey in London, on Monday , March 12, 2018.

The protestors were demanding decriminalisation in 37 of the 53 Commonwealth nations that still outlaw homosexuality.

Nine of the countries have life imprisonment for gay sex and in parts of two countries, Nigeria and Pakistan, there is the death penalty.

The protest at Westminster Abbey, as dignitaries arrived, was coordinated by the Peter Tatchell Foundation working with 14 other UK-based human rights groups including: The Commonwealth Equality Network, Kaleidoscope Trust, Peter Tatchell Foundation, UK Black Pride, African Equality Foundation, Equality Network, African Rainbow Family, Movement for Justice, African Eye Trust, House of Rainbow, Out & Proud African LGBTI, Micro Rainbow , Africa Advocacy Foundation, Rainbow Across Borders, Manchester Migrant Solidarity and included LGBT+ people from across the Commonwealth.

Abbey, who escaped Uganda, said he: “came from hell, with cigarette burns in both my palms and on my legs, and scars on my face which resulted from the constant beating. I went through every kind of human degradation.” 

Peter Tatchell, who organised the protest, said: “The Commonwealth is a homophobic institution. It is a bastion of anti-LGBT+ laws, discrimination and hate crime. LGBT+ issues have never been discussed, not even once, by Commonwealth leaders at any of their summits over the last six decades.​
 
“Surely in 2018 Commonwealth heads of government should address the state-sanctioned persecution of more than 100 million LGBT+ Commonwealth citizens.
 
“Most of these anti-gay laws were imposed by Britain during the colonial era in the nineteenth century. They are not authentic indigenous laws. Now that these nations are independent, they should be repealed as a continuation of the de-colonisation process.” 

Peter Tatchell with Rev Jide Macaulay (left), Hamimah Minah and Edwin Sesange (right) of Uganda.

The protestors key demands from the Commonwealth were to: 
♦ Decriminalise same-sex relations
♦ Prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity
♦ Enforce laws against threats and violence, to protect LGBT+ people from hate crimes
♦ Consult and dialogue with national LGBT+ organisations

Next month, campaigners will hand a petition to the Commonwealth’s Secretary General; it currently has over 90,000 signatures and is growing. The petition is timed to coincide with the biennial Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) which, this year, is being held in London and Windsor.

Mr Tatchell continued: “I have tried for 30 years to get the Commonwealth leader’s summit to discuss the criminalisation of LGBTs by 70% of member states. They refuse and most also reject dialogue with their local LGBT+ movements.” 

“Commonwealth countries account for half of the world’s 72 nations where same-sex relations are illegal. Hate crimes against LGBT+ people are widespread and unchecked in these countries.”
 
“More than 100 million LGBT+ people living in Commonwealth nations have no legal protection against discrimination in employment, housing, education, health care and the provision of good and services. This makes a mockery of Commonwealth values and the human rights principles of the Commonwealth Charter.”
 
“The London summit is an opportunity to debate this issue and hear the voices of LGBT+ people from across the Commonwealth. It is time to end this unabated persecution.
 
“Our huge thanks to the 14 organisations and the many LGBT+ activists from across the Commonwealth who made such an impact today.” 

 

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