Are LGBTQ rights blossoming in Bhutan?
Finance Minister Namgay Tshering, who had submitted the recommendation to repeal the penal code, said the sections had become a “stain” on the country’s reputation.
By TANIKA GODBOLE
In 2021, Bhutan decriminalised homosexuality after King Druk Gyalpo signed off on a law amending the small Himalayan country’s penal code. Parts of the code had criminalised “sodomy or any other sexual conduct that is against the order of nature,” which was a thinly veiled reference to gay sex. Finance Minister Namgay Tshering, who had submitted the recommendation to repeal the penal code, said the sections had become a “stain” on the country’s reputation.
“There is a high degree of acceptability of the LGBT+ community in our society,” he said. Last month, Tashi Choden Chombal was crowned Miss Bhutan 2022, and will become the first openly lesbian woman to represent Bhutan in the Miss Universe 2022 pageant.
“Initially, it was a little difficult to make my family understand about my sexual orientation as I come from a very ‘straight’ and conservative family. But things have changed now, as they have accepted me as I am,” she told the South China Morning Post newspaper in an interview.
“There has been tremendous support for the first queer Miss Bhutan. She has become a queer icon now. This is reflective of the changing times,” said Namgay Zam, director of the Journalists’ Association of Bhutan and LGBTQ rights activist.
“There are no separate spaces for the queer population, but that’s really because people are not barred entry based on gender. Even the Royal Bhutan Police are queer-sensitive now,” Zam told DW. Almost 75% of Bhutan’s population of just over 770,000 practices Buddhism, and its constitution recognises it as the state religion. Buddhist philosophy does not oppose homosexuality.
However, a year after decriminalisation of homosexuality, LGBTQ activists say there is still little awareness about members of their community and the issues they face.
“There are a lot of misconceptions about the community, such as homosexuality being a choice,” Tashi Tsheten, a rights activist with Queer Voices Bhutan, told DW. “There is also a lack of awareness about different terminology, and what it means. People are still learning, and due to decriminalisation, they have become more open to learning,” Tsheten added. “People from the community don’t often talk about violence or persecution that they face,” the activist said.
Additionally, same-sex marriage is not yet legally recognised in Bhutan. Bhutan transitioned from an absolute monarchy to a constitutional state in 2008. Its penal code was set up in 2004. Much of the criminal code was adapted from the US legal system, according to research by legal scholars Dema Lham and Stanley Yeo. However, the sections prohibiting sodomy and “unnatural sex” were similar to those found in some other South Asian nations.
“Transwomen were the first visible members of the community here. They have told me that Bhutanese society in general is quite accepting,” said activist Zam. “Visibility has increased through advocacy by organisations. Even before the decriminalisation of homosexuality, several transwomen were able to officially change their names and gender,” Zam added.
Physiotherapist Passang Dorji came out on television in 2015 before decriminalisation. “Coming out on TV and telling my story, I think that the younger generation was inspired. This was mainly to make visible that our LGBT community exists in our beautiful Himalayan country, where we measure happiness more than the gross economic product. That was a silence-breaking moment for Bhutanese LGBT,” he said during the Salzburg Global LGBT Forum in 2016.
This article was provided by Deutsche Welle
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