Colombo is reaching the end of a three week celebration of PRIDE activities. The events, largely coordinated by Equal Ground, included a Rainbow Bus Parade, a pop quiz, a Film Festival at the British Council and a kite festival – an appropriately diverse range of ways to draw attention to an important human right, the right not to be discriminated against because of sexual orientation or gender identity.
The High Commission supported the full programme, with a special focus on a decriminalisation workshop and a forum on the corporate benefits of diversity.
GCHQ’s most famous member of staff was Alan Turing. He became famous for two reasons – one, his mathematical genius which led to the breaking of the German Enigma code and shortening the Second World War and all the lives that that saved, but also the creation of the world’s first digital computer and everything that now flows from that, including the Internet. He’s also famous for being gay, and sadly famous for his treatment; his conviction, prosecution and chemical castration at the hands of the criminal justice system, and his subsequent suicide in 1954.
It was partly to honour Turing that GCHQ lit up their building to celebrate IDAHOBiT day last year. It was also kind of an act of atonement – for the lost opportunity of his early death. Who knows what Turing would have gone on to do, where, for example, he might have taken his pioneering interest in Artificial Intelligence? As Robert Hannigan said, we will never know and should never, as a society, repeat that mistake.
It took a while for the UK to learn that lesson. But although there is always further to go, we now have strict legislation in place to protect and encourage diversity of all kinds, in the public and the private sector.
Here is a typical, anonymised, case reported to Equal Ground through NexGen. A young man was open about his gay sexuality on his Facebook account. Six “friends” responded to this by attempting to sexually abuse him at his university hostel. Trying to run away, the young man tripped down the stairs, damaging his spine. After a stay in hospital, he returned to the university, to find himself ostracised and attacked again because of his sexual orientation. The university has failed to take any action against the perpetrators, so the individual has taken the matter to court, but is still receiving threats from his fellow students.
The second focus of High Commission support to PRIDE this month was a workshop on decriminalisation. Homosexuality is still illegal in Sri Lanka, and PRIDE’s programme included several events encouraging activism to campaign against criminalisation. Together with other international missions, the UK has spoken out against this discriminatory legislation, calling on the government to repeal sections 365 and 365A of the Penal Code.
I look forward to the day when being discriminated against or abused for being gay appears as outdated as being denied the vote or not allowed to own property for being female.