Straights to also join Delhi's first gay parade
IANS ,Monday, June 23, 2008  19:56 IST

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1173042
NEW DELHI: Celebrating their pride in their sexuality, gays in the
national capital will, for the first time, march through the heart of
the city on Sunday to proclaim they needed to be treated as normal
human beings.

Transsexuals and some straights will also be part of the parade,
called 'Queer Pride', with similar marches being conducted June 29 in
Kolkata and Bangalore as well.

An annual global event, the pride march would simultaneously be
conducted in 20 cities across the world, writer and activist Gautam
Bhan said.

"The whole programme was planned only two weeks ago when friends from
Kolkata contacted me and discussed about the pride march," Bhan said.

"We then started getting in touch with people in Delhi and the
response from gays as well as straights has been quite encouraging,"
he added.

" 'Queer Pride' is a celebration. It is about loving who we are,
whether lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, 'hijra' or straight, and
affirming everyone's right to be respected for his or her own sexual
choices," Bhan pointed out.

"It is a celebration of how far we have come and how long we still
have to go," he maintained.

The parade would begin at 5.30 p.m. on Sunday from Regal Building at
Connaught Place.

"We will gather at the Regal cinema at the Connaught Place Outer
Circle, then parade our pride along the Inner Circle, through Central
Park, down Janpath and right to Jantar Mantar, where we will celebrate
by singing, making speeches and conducting a candlelight vigil," Bhan
said.

The activists are inviting everyone to be a part of the parade and are
busy appealing people through blogs and e-mails to join in. The
activists are also fundraising for the event.

"If anyone wants to be out on the street and yet under cover, they
would be provided masks to cover faces or they can bring something
along themselves," Lesley A. Esteves, a journalist, said.

Talking about their right not to be discriminated against, Bhan said:
"It is all about human rights. We call India greatest democracy in the
world and keep our head high in Southeast Asia. But we are far less
progressive than our neighbours such as Nepal and Sri Lanka."

"We should learn from Nepal, which in its new constitution has cleared
that no one would be discriminated against on basis of sexuality."

"The march would help in instilling a feeling of protection among
those who do not want to come out in the open," he added.

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