Bangkok Post

Pop star says Malaysia show dropped over LGBT support

- BEH LIH YI THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

A Hong Kong pop star said last week she had been denied permission to perform in Malaysia because she campaigns for gay rights, amid criticism from activists of rising intoleranc­e toward the LGBT community in the Muslim-majority nation.

Singer Denise Ho, who is openly gay, said Malaysian officials told her promoter that her applicatio­n to perform in the capital Kuala Lumpur in April was refused due to her support for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r (LGBT) people.

The LGBT community is routinely persecuted in Malaysia, where gay sex is criminalis­ed — punishable by up to 20 years in prison, caning, or a fine — and the government sanctions campaigns seeking to curb homosexual­ity and transgende­rism.

“I am disappoint­ed,” Ho, one of Asia’s most famous Cantopop stars, said. “You would think that in 2018, where many countries are pushing for gay rights and same-sex marriages, that the world would be progressin­g,” she added. “But in fact it is not.”

A Malaysian government minister did not specify why the applicatio­n was turned down, but said all performanc­es in the country must be done in accordance to local law and values. “Malaysia welcomes any artist who projects a wholesome value,” the country’s communicat­ions minister, Salleh Said Keruak, said.

Ho, who came out publicly in 2012, said she had performed in Malaysia in 2006 without any issues. At least 2,000 people had been expected to attend her concert in April, she added.

“Everyone has the right to be themselves. We can be openly gay as someone else can be Christian or Muslim,” Ho said.

An article by a Malaysian newspaper on how to identify LGBT people sparked outrage on social media this week.

Last year Malaysian health authoritie­s launched a contest on how to “prevent” homosexual­ity and transgende­rism, though it later dropped it after pressure from LGBT groups.

Neighbouri­ng Indonesia, the country with the world’s largest Muslim population, is on the cusp of revising its national criminal code to impose restrictio­ns on same-sex relations and consensual sex between men and women outside marriage.

Yet elsewhere in the region, Taiwan ruled last year that same-sex couples can legally marry, in a huge boost for the gay rights movement in Asia, and Hong Kong will host the 2022 Gay Games, the first Asian city to hold the sports and cultural event.

 ??  ?? Hong Kong singers Denise Ho, right, and Anthony Wong, who have announced their homosexual status, take part in a candleligh­t vigil to mourn victims of the shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, in Hong Kong, June 13, 2016.
Hong Kong singers Denise Ho, right, and Anthony Wong, who have announced their homosexual status, take part in a candleligh­t vigil to mourn victims of the shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, in Hong Kong, June 13, 2016.

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