Proposed legislation that would have recognised same-sex couples in Taiwan and due for introduction to the legislature on Wednesday has been delayed because of "obstacles," a gay activist attributes to a possible backlash in the run-up to next year's presidential elections.
President Chen Shui-bian
The Human Rights Basic Law was expected to be presented to the Legislative Yuan today to coincide with World Human Rights Day. The proposed law was to have included recognition of same-sex families and access to adoption, as well as abolition of the death penalty.
If the new law is approved by the legislature, Taiwan, an island nation off the coast of mainland China and with a population of 22.5 million, would be the first in Asia to recognise gay and lesbian couples.
Chan said he had been told by the Presidential Office that there had been some "obstacles," but the TGLHRA believes the bill was deemed too sensitive to put forward due political inroads made by the conservative Kuomintang (KMT) and the threat to President Chen's ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which faces elections on Mar 20 next year.
"The Presidential Office is afraid of pressure from the straight community because of the presidential elections," Chan said.
President Chen was on his way to New York to receive the 2003 Human Rights Award from the International League for Human Rights when he announced his government's long-awaited proposal to introduce the Human Rights basic Law to the Legislative Yuan.
"He was getting this big award and needed to say something positive," Chan said in a telephone interview with Fridae.
Chan said the proposed bill appears to have "encountered obstacles" during Cabinet review and had been shelved, possibly until March next year, but probably until after the elections.
"I am neither surprised nor angry," Chan said. "The government is really very conservative on the gay and lesbian issue, and some one might say are a bit homophobic."
Chan said the human rights law was nowhere near completion and was unaware of any input from Taiwan's gay and lesbian community on what they want in such a law.
"We have never been contacted, and I don't know if anyone else has been asked to contribute either," he said.
"But even when they talked about this issue, the government itself said it was just a proposal, a plan, and not a reality."
Chan said the TGLHRA would attempt to find out from the Presidential Office what the government's next step will be, but meanwhile would continue to try to mobilise Taiwan's tongzhi (which literally means comrade, has been appropriated by the Chinese gay movement as the preferred term for gays) community to step up pressure on the administration.
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