Hong Kong Pride Parade

The Hong Kong Pride Parade (Chinese: 香港同志遊行) is an annual march in Hong Kong in support of LGBT rights. Homosexuality is legal in Hong Kong since 1991 but there is no legal recognition of any same-sex relationships and limited protection against discrimination.

For the past several years the march has begun in Victoria Park and ended in Tamar Park or, in the most recent parade, at Edinburgh Place in front of City Hall.

History

Formal organised parades

There are four main organisations that participate the parade: Women Coalition of HKSAR, Rainbow of Hong Kong, Nutong Xueshe, and Gay Harmony.

2008

This is the first formal Pride Parade in Hong Kong. The parade was held on December 13, 2008, the route was from Great George Street Pedestrianised Area in Causeway Bay to the Southorn Playground in Wan Chai.[1]

2009

The second parade was held on November 1, 2009, the route was from the ending of the last year’s parade—Southorn Playground in Wan Chai to Chater Garden in Central.[2]

2010

For financial reasons the Pride Parade did not take place and suspended.[3]

2011

The third parade was held on November 12, 2011, the route was from East Point Road to the Southorn Playground.[4]

2012

The fourth parade was held on November 10, 2012, the route was from Victoria Park in Causeway Bay to the Chater Garden in Central.[5] The parade was held after the veto of Cyd Ho's bill in the Legislative Council, which was asking the HKSAR government to have proposals about consultations to expend the protected discrimination against the LGBT people in Hong Kong. Some anti-LGBT organizations such as Christian Right groups The Society For Truth And Light had reached thousands of signatures to oppose the consultation on expand the legislation of limited discrimination on LGBT people.

2013

The fifth pride parade was held on 9 November 2013. Approximately 5,200 marched from Victoria Park to the Central Government Complex.[6] During the event the pro-Beijing Liberal Party approached people and urged them to sign a petition in opposition of same-sex marriage.[6]

2014

On 8 November 2014 marchers walked in the rain from Victoria Park to Tamar Park in front of the Central Government Complex. Organisers estimated that 8,900 took part, and stated that the boost in numbers could be partly attributed to Umbrella Movement participants as well as increased corporate sponsorship, including the MTR Corporation having offered the parade in-station advertising at a discounted rate.[7] Dr. York Chow, chairman of the Equal Opportunities Commission, joined the parade for a second year in spite of criticism from anti-gay groups.

2015

The seventh parade was held on 8 November, 2015. About 9,000 participants marched from Victoria Park to Tamar Park at the Central Government Complex. This is the largest parade since 2008.

2016

The eighth parade was held on 26 November 2016. The march started at Victoria Park and ended at Edinburgh Place in Central. In spite of cold weather and heavy rain, about 6,800 took part in the parade, including top diplomats in Hong Kong and various legislators including Leung Kwok-hung (Long Hair), Alvin Yeung, and Raymond Chan. The theme of the parade was the "green light", symbolising the fight to switch on the green light for equality. The new chairman of the Equal Opportunities Commission, Alfred Chan Cheung-ming, urged the government to move forward with anti-discrimination legislation to cover sexual orientation and gender identity.[8] The parade organisers criticised the absence of progress on this front during the current administration's tenure, and pointed out that Hong Kong society (including 90 per cent of Hong Kong youth) support the enactment of such laws.[9]

Description

Every year’s pride parade has its theme and dress code, stressing different concerns and request of LGBT rights. The theme of Pride Parade 2012 was ‘Dare to love’ and the dress code was different profession outfits which meant equality of LGBT in workplace.[10]

In Pride Parade 2012, many celebrities participated the campaign, including singers Denise Ho and Anthony Wong, and politicians Cyd Ho and Ray Chan. They led 4,000 people in the demonstration.[11] Denise Ho came out at the parade officially. She said "As a celebrity, I think I have an obligation, a duty to stand forward for the sake of love and equality.”[12]

Trend

Number of participants

The first pride parade in Hong Kong started from 2008. There was almost 1,000. The next year, the number increased for 800 people. However, there was no pride parade held in 2010 due to the lack of funds. In 2011, the parade restarted and 2,500 people participated in the parade. In 2012, number of participants increased to 4,000.[13]

Social atmosphere

The scale of pride parade becomes bigger. And the ticket sold in 2011 was 75%. The festival director, Karl Uhrich, believed that the sales of tickets would be better in 2012 due to the increasing tolerance of the gay and lesbian community.[14]

Impact

The yearly Hong Kong Pride Parades brought increasing numbers of LGBT individuals out of their closets. The event’s official website claimed that the number of participants nearly doubled in 2012 than that of 2011.[15] Its organizer, Connie Chan Man-wai in 2012 said that Hong Kong is the only city in China open for gay pride parades, and each year there are one-third of the parade participants being Mainlanders.[16]

Additionally, it raised awareness and mass support for LGBT rights. Chan also revealed that corporate sponsors and university students were eager to join for the first time since the beginning of these parades.[16]

Criticism

In June 2011, Hong Kong Government hired a psychiatrist to train government counsellors and claimed that homosexuality can be "cured", which outraged the gay right activists.[17]

In June 2012, Hong Kong evangelist Pastor Enoch Lam held a religious seminar on "The Christian View on Homosexuality" in response of the gay right activities. In the seminar, he compared drug and gambling addiction to homosexuality and said: "[So] homosexuals, drug addicts, God still loves them all. However, I want to tell them that their behaviors, God will not agree and they must correct [themselves]."[18] This statements made a huge criticism from the society, including some Liberal Christians, stated that it was discriminated to the LGBT people.

See also

References

  1. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2008" (in English and Chinese). Retrieved 28 Mar 2013.
  2. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2009".
  3. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2010".
  4. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2011".
  5. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2012".
  6. 1 2 Choi, Christy (10 November 2013). "Turnout doubles for gay pride march". South China Morning Post.
  7. Fung, Fanny W.Y. (8 November 2014). "Gay pride parade and Occupy movement promote equal rights in society". South China Morning Post.
  8. Carvalho, Raquel (26 November 2016). "Hong Kong's eighth annual Pride Parade sees 6,800 marchers call for law to protect LGBT community from discrimination". South China Morning Post.
  9. "The Hong Kong Pride Parade 2016". Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  10. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2012: theme".
  11. "Legislators led 4,000 in Hong Kong Pride Parade". CNN.
  12. "Denise Ho, Cantonese Pop Star, Comes Out During Hong Kong's Gay Pride Parade (VIDEO)". Huffpost Gay Voice. 13 November 2012.
  13. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2012". 2012-11-25. Retrieved 28 Mar 2013.
  14. Vivienne Chow (7 August 2012). "Growing gay festival seeks wider audience". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 28 Mar 2013.
  15. "Hong Kong Pride Parade 2012".
  16. 1 2 Cheng, Jennifer (8 November 2011). "Group behind gay pride parade cries discrimination". South China Morning Post.
  17. AFP (12 November 2011). "Over 2,000 march in Hong Kong's gay pride parade". AFP. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  18. "Pastor Enoch preaches on homosexuality". 2012-03-12.

External links

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