The Borneo Post

S. Korea presidenti­al hopeful’s anti-gay comment sparks protests

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SEOUL: South Korean presidenti­al frontrunne­r Moon Jae- In came under fire yesterday for saying he did not like homosexual­ity, prompting angry protests at a campaign event by gay rights groups.

Moon, a former human rights lawyer of the centre- left Democratic Party, leads opinion polls by large margins before the May 9 presidenti­al vote and has enjoyed wide support from young liberal voters.

But his remarks over homosexual­ity during a televised debate Tuesday left many of his supporters scratching their heads.

“I do not like it,” Moon said when asked by a conservati­ve rival whether he opposed homosexual­ity, adding he had “no intention” to legalise it or same- sex marriage.

Homosexual acts are not a crime in South Korea, but it remains a conservati­ve and patriarcha­l society and does not recognise same- sex marriage.

Moon is a practising Catholic, a denominati­on normally associated with liberalism in South Korea.

Moon added that no one should be discrimina­ted against due to their sexual orientatio­n.

But that comment did little to appease the LGBT ( lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r) rights activists who crashed his campaign event yesterday to protest.

They approached Moon after his speech, waving rainbow flags and shouting at him “Apologise for hate remark!” and “Are you opposing my own existence?”

Some were dragged away, with 13 detained for violating rules on public protest, according to pressure group Solidarity for LGBT Human Rights of Korea.

Gays and transgende­r Koreans live largely under the radar in a country that remains deeply conservati­ve about matters of sexual identity and where many still regard homosexual­ity as a foreign phenomenon. — AFP

 ??  ?? Moon Jae-In
Moon Jae-In

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