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Nepal Celebrates its First International Pride

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010


Following up on a previous post, Nepal celebrated its first international gay pride parade yesterday.  A crowd estimated at 2,000 came from all over the world, including India, Japan, Britain, Germany, Denmark and Norway.

The Times of India reports:

“Dozens of young men and women, dressed in costumes, masks, and animal ensembles, marched in a gay pride reminding one of the Mardi Gras celebrations in Brazil. Organised under the aegis of Blue Diamond Society, Nepal’s pioneering gay rights organisation, the march, now in its ninth year, has grown from strength to strength since its inception when the participants hid their faces behind masks for fear of being identified.”

“From this year, our march has become internationalised,” said Sunil Babu Pant, BDS founder and Nepal’s only openly gay MP who successfully lobbied Supreme Court to recognise same-sex marriages and is now hosting such events for foreigners in Nepal with his gay travel agency, Pink Mountains, promising elaborate honeymoon packages. “We have the support of the Irish parliament, the American ambassador to Nepal, Scott DeLisi, has sent a message of solidarity and the march saw the participation of the British ambassador, John Tucknott. Thousands of gays die worldwide every year, some of natural causes, some due to AIDS/HIV and many due to violence. In Nepal, there were 10 known deaths last year. But no one remembers them. Our gay parade ends with a candle-light vigil in memory of those who died last year. This is about equality for all.”

Nepal to Host First Gay Pride

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

On August 25th, Kathmandu, Nepal will hold the nation’s first Gay Pride parade, says Sunil Babu Pant, Nepal’s first publicly gay lawmaker and a leading gay rights activist in South Asia.

Pant said he hopes up to 3,000 gays, lesbians, transvestites and transsexuals from Nepal and neighboring countries will march through the streets of the capital Kathmandu on August 25. The date has been chosen to coincide with a centuries-old Hindu festival when Nepalese men traditionally dress up in women’s clothing, and which has in recent years been adopted by Nepal’s increasingly vocal gay community.

‘We want to make this a truly international event,’ said Pant.’  ‘Nepal has made so much progress on gay issues in the last few years, and we hope to spread hope and inspire others.’

The parade will feature live music and include elephants and horses dressed in bright colors, and will culminate with a candle-lit memorial service for victims of HIV and violence.

Sunil Babu Pant, Nepal’s first openly gay MP

Photo Credit: Blue Diamond Society

This is progress on hyper speed for a country that only decriminalized homosexuality in December 2007.  (That ruling, by the Nepali Supreme Court, also brought recognition of transgendered individuals as a “third sex”.)   Less than a year later on November 18, 2008, the Supreme Court directed the government to enact laws granting equal rights to LGBT citizens, including same-sex marriage.  The court ordered the government to form a seven member committee to formulate laws similar to European countries that recognize same-sex marriage.  The constitution of Nepal, which is expected to be completed in May of 2011, will include same-sex marriage and protection for sexual minorities.

Pant, apparently a very busy man, is also a leading advocate of making Nepal a new LGBT tourism destination and the founder and chairman of Pink Mountain Travels & Tours, which is welcoming gay, lesbian, and transgendered tourists into Nepal with open arms, showing what a LGBT friendly country Nepal can be and, of course, showing off his beautiful country at the top of the world.

The website is very new, so keep checking back as they develop more.  http://www.pinkyatra.com/

It’s the dawn of a new age for Nepal and LGBT people in South Asia, so grab your hiking boots and make a visit to the gay-friendliest place in all the Himalayas.

 

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