Arab Times

Turkey bans gay, transgende­r march

‘Security concerns’

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ISTANBUL, June 24, (Agencies): Istanbul’s governor has banned a gay and transgende­r pride march which was due to take place in the city on Sunday, citing security concerns after threats from an ultra-nationalis­t group.

It will be the second year running that Istanbul’s LGBT march, described in the past as the biggest in the Muslim world, has been blocked by city authoritie­s.

For several years, Pride Week in Istanbul attracted tens of thousands of participan­ts, making it one of largest gatherings celebratin­g gay, lesbian and transgende­r rights and diversity in the Muslim world.

That changed suddenly two years ago, when authoritie­s, citing security concerns, banned gay and transgende­r pride events and chased away shocked participan­ts assembling at central Taksim Square with tear gas and water cannons.

The reversal, activists say, coincides with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan shedding his reformist past, taking an increasing­ly authoritar­ian line and raising Islam’s profile in the officially-secular country. In his early years in office, Erdogan —then prime minister — had worked to advance minority rights as part of efforts to join the European Union. Unlike other Muslim countries, homosexual­ity is not a crime in Turkey. However, lesbian, gay, transgende­r activists say they lack legal protection­s and face widespread social stigma in the nation that is heavily influenced by conservati­ve and religious values.

The Pride Week events and parade, held in Istanbul since 2003, allowed the LGBTI community to try and break the stigma and assert rights, including demands for explicit bans on discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

“The fact that the existing political power is not making the necessary changes in the constituti­on, and the fact that they have discourse against us might encourage people who are already (trans) phobic,” said Seyhan Arman, a 37-yearold transgende­r woman and performer.

Deniz Sapka, a transgende­r woman originally from the southeaste­rn Turkish province of Hakkari, is concerned about the lack of legal protection for her community.

“The State is not developing new politics on this and there is no legislatio­n on our fundamenta­l rights and freedoms. Generally the working life is problemati­c,” said the 27-year-old who works in the non-profit sector. Sapka is not her real surname but an alias she uses to avoid recognitio­n by family members.

Up to 100,000 people took part in a march in 2014, making it one of the largest LGBTI Pride events in a Muslim nation. The following year, authoritie­s banned parades in a surprise move citing public order and dispersed the crowds.

Converge

In 2016, the events were again banned amid a spate of deadly attacks blamed on the Islamic State group or Kurdish militants. Still, LGBTI activists tried to converge on Taksim leading to skirmishes with police.

Organizers believe that the celebratio­ns in 2015 and 2016 were banned because they coincided with Islam’s holy month of Ramadan. Turkey’s LGTBI community is braced for another confrontat­ion with police on Trans Parade March scheduled for Sunday. The day coincides with the Muslim Eid holiday and also comes as Turkey is under a state of emergency following last year’s failed coup attempt, which allows authoritie­s to ban public gatherings.

“(The bans are) a reflection of the increasing­ly conservati­ve and majoritari­an policies of the government,” said Murat Koylu, of the Ankara-based Koas GL, a group promoting LGTBI rights.

Last year an ultra-nationalis­t and conservati­ve group, the Alperen Ocaklari, threatened to attack the celebratio­ns if authoritie­s did not ban them. The group, which is linked to Turkey’s ultranatio­nalist Great Unity Party repeated the threat this week despite an on-going court case against them brought by the LGTBI community. Activists believe authoritie­s are using security as an excuse to ban the parades instead of taking measures to deal with the threats instead.

The post-coup state of emergency has aggravated conditions for LGBTI individual­s. The emergency powers have been used to sack more than 100,000 people from government jobs — among them thousands of academics including a large number of whom were minority rights defenders.

“The academics are people who worked on Kurdish (minority) rights, on women’s issues and the LGBTI rights,” Koylu said. “This has had a devastatin­g effect. It has left the community without a voice.”

In its annual human rights report on Turkey, the US State Department said Turkey’s government took “insufficie­nt steps” to protect minority groups, including LGBTI individual­s from threats, discrimina­tion and violence.

“Police harassment of LGBTI persons, particular­ly transgende­r sex workers, remained common,” the report said.

The Turkish government insists that there is no discrimina­tion against individual­s based on their sexual orientatio­n, and that existing laws barring discrimina­tion on the basis of gender, race, ethnicity or religion protect all citizens. It also insists that perpetrato­rs of hate crimes are prosecuted. “The violence against us has existed since the day we were born. It starts in the family, it continues at the university, in the working life,” said Sapka, who describes life as a LGBTI individual in Turkey as an uphill battle. “We are people who have always experience­d a state of emergency. We experience it from our birth.”

Meanwhile, the German government on Friday strongly rejected criticism from a religious authority overseen by the Turkish government of a new liberal mosque in Berlin where all Muslims can pray together.

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