Outrage among LGBTQ+ community: Seoul refuses permission for Pride Parade | Abroad

Today, Seoul rejected a request to hold a Pride Parade in downtown Seoul Plaza in July. De Parade is part of a 17-day festival in support of the LGBTQ+ community. The festival starts on June 22 and the event was scheduled for July 1.

Both the LGBTQ+ rights group and a religious group, CTS Culture Foundation, have applied to use the square on June 30 and July 1. However, the city’s authorities have favored the religious group.

Overlap

The decision to cancel the Pride Parade in Seoul was made on the basis of the policy of the local government led by conservative mayor Oh Se-hoon. This policy states that child and youth welfare events will be prioritized when multiple applications overlap on the same date. He added that both applicants rejected Seoul’s request to move their events.

The decision sparked strong reactions from LGBTQ+ communities. Activists claimed the religious group’s planned event was intended to incite bigotry against the LGBTQ+ community. “Underneath Seoul’s stance lurks hatred of sexual minorities,” the rights group Rainbow Action Against Sexual Minority Discrimination of Korea said in a statement today. The organizer of the queer festival said it would find ways to stick to its plan.

A spokesperson for CTS Culture Foundation responded that the plan to organize the event was continued “to avoid the rainy season”.

The city’s first Pride Parade was held in 2015 and has been held every year since then, with the exception of the previous two years due to the pandemic.

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