When I was a teenager, my uncles tried to teach me to walk like a man, my classmates would call me chhakka (slur word for gay),” says Tashi Tsheten, a 26-year old lab technician who leads one of Bhutan’s most prominent LGBTIQ groups, Rainbow Bhutan.
The Himalayan Kingdom has never punished homosexuality, he explains, but most in their religiously conservative society would rather not talk about it. As a result, while Bhutan has had two Sections (213 and 214) in its Penal Code that ordered imprisonment for “unnatural sex” for decades, no one was ever actually prosecuted under the law. Instead, Mr. Tsheten and other activists in the gay rights movement say they faced bullying and heckling from classmates, and the odd family elder trying to make them more “manly”.
This month, with Bhutan’s new government initiating the process to repeal the two Sections, Mr. Tsheten says he hopes even that sort of harassment will come to an end. On June 7, Parliament’s lower house, the National Assembly, passed a Bill to repeal section 213 (and consequently 214). The Bill is expected to be taken up by the upper house, the National Council, in six months. Once it passes, the Act will be presented to the 39-year-old King, Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, for approval.
“This was an arcane law and has never been implemented in Bhutan and so we felt that the time had come to dispense with it,” says Tashi Wangyal, a member of the National Council. “In Bhutan, we may be religiously conservative, but we are socially liberal, as can be seen from our attitudes and open acceptance when it comes to divorce or children born out of wedlock, or rehabilitation of prisoners.”
Bhutan also has fairly progressive laws on gender equality. Women form a large part of the workforce, and in 2018 elections, seven of the 10 women contestants won. At clubs in downtown Thimphu that can stay open till 5 a.m., the openness of Bhutanese society is plain to see: girls and boys mix freely, women’s safety is not a concern, and alcoholism and drugs, not sexual freedoms, are bigger issues for the youth.
Bhutanese pride themselves on prioritising “Gross National Happiness” over GDP wealth, and approve of the country’s freedoms and tolerant values, which they say flow from the Buddhism practised by a majority in the country. But the leap from gender equality to equality for transgenders and homosexuals will take longer, say activists. Read more via the Hindu