“Greater visibility ... has led macho groups, fundamentalist sectors to reject this public presence of gays, lesbians and trans people.”
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South Korea: How South Korea’s Nightclub Outbreak Is Shining an Unwelcome Spotlight on the LGBTQ Community
In his early 20s, after leaving business school to follow his ambition of becoming an artist and performer, Heezy Yang was drawn to an out-of-the-way area of Seoul’s Itaewon district known as Homo Hill, a longtime haven for LGBTQ people in South Korea.
There, he found a place where he could interact with others without fear of judgement or discrimination, while exploring ways to express his sexuality through art. The area is a craggy hill near a U.S. military base, where, after dark, bright signs bearing the names of clubs like Queen and Soho cast the streets in multicolored light.
Nowadays, those lights are off, the bars and nightclubs are closed and the usually buzzing streets are uncharacteristically quiet after a coronavirus cluster with more than 130 cases shined unwanted attention on the neighborhood—sparking a surge in homophobia, activists say.
The South Korean government is now trying to track down anyone who visited establishments in the neighborhood, sparking fears that the country’s efficient, aggressive system of contact tracing could lead to people being outed, and imperil the neighborhood’s status as a discreet area where LGBTQ people can be themselves.
The publicity is a stark departure for an area that is normally a discreet sanctuary for LGBTQ people in South Korea—a country that ranks low among developed economies for LGBTQ acceptance, and where many choose to keep their sexual orientations private to avoid discrimination at their workplaces or from their families.
South Korea’s media began focusing on the neighborhood after public health authorities announced that a 29-year-old man who later tested positive for the coronavirus visited several establishments in the area on May 2. Authorities gathered a list of more than 5,500 people who visited clubs there. As of Thursday, they had still not managed to contact some 2,500 of them. Read more via Time
Now is the time to take courage. It is true that sexual minorities are basically afraid of their identity being known to family, acquaintances, and society. So it takes courage. As a person who has been in Itaewon for a long time, this is a pity and anxiety, and most of all, I am most concerned that there are still too many people who have not been examined and cannot be contacted. Of course, I know better than anyone that I'm worried about 'outing', but now, above all else, the health and safety of myself, my family, and society are our top priority.
Fortunately, the 'Anonymous Guarantee' test is said to be possible, so you still need to be tested right now. It is a difficult time for everyone. And everyone is trying to get out of this situation. Quarantine authorities, medical staff, and a citizen I urge you to take courage and go to the prosecution right now so that the strength and effort of one person have been spent in vain.
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Trans Rights Europe & Central Asia Index 2020
The Trans Rights Europe & Central Asia Index provides detailed information on the legal situation of all 47 Council of Europe member States and five Central Asian countries. The Index covers a total of 30 indicators in six legal categories: legal gender recognition, asylum, bias-motivated speech and violence, non-discrimination, health, and family.