Bangkok Post

Govt pushes bill to ban LGBTQ conversion therapy

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OTTAWA: The Canadian government on Monday announced a bill to ban so-called “conversion therapy”, which tries to change the sexual orientatio­n of young LGBT people.

The bill would create five new offences in the Canadian criminal code, including prohibitin­g subjecting a minor to the practice, either in Canada or abroad.

An adult would also not be able to undergo conversion therapy against his or her will, and no one would be allowed to profit from or advertise it.

If the bill passes, Canada’s laws on conversion therapy would become some of the “most progressiv­e and comprehens­ive in the world”, David Lametti, the minister of justice, told reporters while presenting the bill to parliament.

Two adults who had been forced to undergo conversion therapy in childhood testified on about their experience­s. “I’m a survivor of conversion therapy,” said Erika, a trans woman.

“My body is a prison because of what my conversion therapist did to me, and I live with that every day.”

The bill’s adoption by parliament appears all but assured, even though Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government is the minority in the House of Commons. The left-wing New Democratic Party has already announced it intends to back the bill.

The bill states that conversion therapy causes harm not only to the victims but also to society, particular­ly because the practice is founded on and helps spread myths and stereotype­s about sexual orientatio­n and gender identity, including the myth that sexual orientatio­n and gender identity can and should be changed.

The law would define conversion therapy as “any service, practice or treatment designed to change a person’s sexual orientatio­n to heterosexu­al gender identity to one that matches the sex assigned at birth, or to repress or reduce non-heterosexu­al attraction or sexual behaviours”.

According to a survey, 47,000 Canadian men who identify as part of a minority sexuality group had been subjected to conversion therapy.

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