First gay Hong Kong lawmaker seeks same-sex marriage

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    HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s first openly gay lawmaker is known as “Slow Beat” from his days as a disc jockey, but Raymond Chan says there is nothing slow about his plans to reform the Asian banking hub.

     

    Chan publicly revealed his sexuality only after winning a seat in the  former British colony’s legislature last weekend, as a representative of the  radically pro-democracy People Power party.
     
    He said he plans to use the four-year term of the 70-seat assembly to push  for full democracy and the legalisation of same-sex marriage in the socially  conservative southern Chinese city.
     
    “If I can’t fight for my own rights, how can I help the oppressed and the  underdogs?” the 40-year-old told AFP, wearing a suave sky blue shirt and beige  khaki pants.
     
    “As a lawmaker — whether I like a man or a woman — it doesn’t affect my  capability or my political ideologies.”
     
    Contrary to his soft-spoken manner and boyish look, Chan is a member of a  hard-hitting anti-Beijing party which, along with the League of Social  Democrats, is known for its unruly interruptions of legislative council  sittings.
     
    His victory has been hailed by gay rights activists, who see his election  as a step forward to push for sexual minority rights in a city where  homosexuality was only decriminalised in 1991.
     
    But since then, critics say the fight for equality has been painstakingly  slow despite Hong Kong’s cosmopolitan outlook and ultra-modern self-image.
     
    — Quest for love and democracy —    
     
    A survey sponsored by British bank Barclays in May found Hong Kong’s gay  community faced widespread discrimination, with 85 percent saying they  experienced a “negative impact” at their workplace.
     
    “Hong Kong is definitely lagging behind,” Chan said, explaining that  same-sex couples have no right to public housing, property inheritance or tax  allowances granted to heterosexual married couples.
     
    “There is no protection for gay couples. I hope we can enact laws to ban  discrimination against one’s sexual orientation as soon as possible and of  course, the long-term goal is to amend the laws to allow same-sex marriage.”
     
    He is not daunted by the likely resistance he will face from the city’s  Buddhists and Catholics, and promised to use an “educational” approach rather  than the noisy antics of some of his allied lawmakers.
     
    “It may take one term, it may take two terms, but at least there’s someone  who gets the ball rolling,” he said.
     
    He said he has received overwhelming support since coming out days after  the election, and admitted he did not make public his sexuality during his  campaign because it was “not a selling point”.
     
    He is currently single after breaking up with his boyfriend, who he was in  a relationship with for a year, during the run-up to the polls.
     
    “I was sad that night but I had to go on with my election campaign,” he  said of the separation.
     
    At present, Hong Kong’s chief executive is selected by a 1,200-strong  election committee and only a little over half of the legislature is elected by  popular vote.
     
    Beijing has promised to introduce “full suffrage” for the leadership polls  in 2017 and the 2020 legislative vote, but many democrats fear the communist  mainland authorities have no intention of honouring their promise.
     
    “My dream is that one day when same-sex marriage is allowed in Hong Kong, I  will be the first to get married,” Chan said.
     
    “And I would like to invite the chief executive — one that is elected by  all Hong Kong people through universal suffrage — to my wedding banquet.” -- AFP

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