The Manila Times

Cuba’s new leader brings hope for gay rights

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HAVANA: Gay rights in Cuba have come a long way since the early years of the communist revolution, when countless people were marginaliz­ed or forced to flee because of their sexual orientatio­n.

Now, the island’s LGBT community is pinning its hopes on new leader Miguel Diaz-Canel to fight their corner in the battle for equal rights— with same-sex unions the ultimate goal.

The first Cuban president from outside the Castro family in over 40 years, Diaz-Canel was groomed within the Communist Party and was little known to the wider world before he assumed top office last month.

At home, however, the 58- year- old is known for having signaled support for the LGBT community when he was a provincial secretary for the party.

“He showed a sensitivit­y on the topic when he was leading the party” in the central Villa Clara province, Francisco Rodriguez, a journalist, Communist Party activist, and gay rights campaigner, told AFP.

Rodriguez— who goes by the nickname “Paquito”— said Diaz- Canel had been strongly supportive of a cultural center in Villa Clara called El Mejunje, known as a haven for the local LGBT community.

Installed in the ruins of an old hotel, El Mejunje— which means “The Mixture”— was the only venue in Cuba to host drag performanc­es back in the 1990s.

Cuba has a troubled history when it comes to gay rights: after Fidel Castro’s revolution­aries came to power in 1959, gay people were stigmatize­d, and many were rounded up by police or forced into re-education camps.

Socially marginaliz­ed and barred from public jobs, many LGBT intellectu­als and artists

were forced to flee the country in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.

By the early 2000s, however, the tide had started to turn, and a watershed came in 2010 when Fidel Castro—in a rare instance of self-criticism—admitted responsibi­lity for the “injustices” perpetrate­d against homosexual­s.

Raul and Mariela

After Fidel’s brother Raul took over the presidency in 2008, Raul’s daughter Mariela Castro became a powerful advocate for gay rights as the head of the government-funded National Center for Sex Education (Cenesex) – fighting against political discrimina­tion towards the LGBT community, and in favor of marriage equality.

The lawmaker credits her late mother, Raul Castro’s wife Vilma Espin, for making the first efforts to change the status quo by raising awareness of the issue among the party’s younger generation—which included a youthful Diaz-Canel.

Today, Mariela Castro maintains that her father has been quietly supportive of gay rights.

“What he did as first secretary of the Communist Party and as president... was to cautiously lead the way towards a new consensus,” she said.

She expects Diaz- Canel to pick up where her father left off.

In launching the 11th annual campaign against homophobia and transphobi­a—ushered in earlier this month with a colorful parade through the streets of Havana—Mariela Castro highlighte­d Diaz- Canel’s track record of working with Cenesex, ever since his days as a party youth activist.

Same-sex marriage?

LGBT rights in Cuba have evolved in leaps and bounds in recent years, from the army opening up its ranks to gay soldiers, to the state covering the costs of gender reassignme­nt surgery.

In 2012 a transgende­r woman became the first to win municipal office, as a city councilor in Caibarien, in Villa Clara province.

But while the Communist Party now officially bans employment discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n, same-sex civil unions remain beyond reach, in spite of Catholicis­m being less prevalent in Cuba than other parts of Latin America.

Obtaining legal recognitio­n for same- sex marriage is now the main goal of Cuba’s gay rights movement today.

“It’s not just about sex and nightlife— we have the right to have a family,” Alex Duchel, a 37- year- old restaurant worker, told AFP at the march.

Rodriguez has high hopes that Diaz- Canel will take things further by being the first Cuban president to openly acknowledg­e and address the LGBT community, and the challenges it faces, in his speeches.

Diaz- Canel was not at Mariela Castro’s side for the annual march against homophobia on May 14. However, his musician children Jenny and Miguel were in attendance, wrapping up the event with their band.

For his part, LGBT rights activist Julio Cesar Gonzalez said he hopes “that in four or five years many of the rights we’re claiming now will have been granted.”

Legalizing same-sex unions would first require a change to the country’s 1976 Constituti­on—an issue Mariela Castro said was “discussed quite extensivel­y” at the plenary assembly of the party’s central committee.

“So, we’re moving forward,” she said.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Former Cuban president Raul Castro’s daughter Mariela joins the head of the National Center for Sex Education (Cenesex) in a May 2018 gay pride parade in Havana.
AFP PHOTO Former Cuban president Raul Castro’s daughter Mariela joins the head of the National Center for Sex Education (Cenesex) in a May 2018 gay pride parade in Havana.

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