Qiu Bai, 21, a student at Sun Yat-sen
University in Guangzhou Tuesday carry out legal action against government over
textbooks describing homosexuality as a “psychological disorder”, a landmark
case in a country where discrimination remains strong.
The lesbian Qiu Bai, brought the
action against the ministry of education, demanding that it give her details of
how it approved materials and how they could be changed.
China only officially decriminalised
homosexuality in 1997, removing it from its list of mental illnesses four years
later.
Qiu’s team showed AFP a manual,
“Student Psychological Health”, published in 2015 by the prestigious Renmin
University and distributed to students nationwide.
“The most commonly encountered forms
of sexual deviance are homosexuality and the sick addictions of transvestism,
transsexuality, fetishism, sadism, voyeurism and exhibitionism,” it read.
Other psychology textbooks had similar
content.
Qiu, who uses a pseudonym for fear of
being victimised, told AFP that she hoped to make sure such materials “no
longer harm students”, adding that she had come under pressure from her
university over the case, but it had been mitigated by coverage in Chinese
media.
Holding a large rainbow flag, she said
she was “excited” by her “first opportunity to have a face-to-face dialogue
with the ministry of education”.
Supporters brandished signs outside
the Fengtai district court in Beijing reading: “We want a fair judgement” and
“Homosexuals must gain visibility”.
“Of the 90 textbooks available in the
libraries of Guangzhou, 42 percent present homosexuality as a disease or
abnormality,” said Peng Yanhui, director of the non-profit LGBT Rights
Advocacy, based in the southern city, citing a study.
Attitudes are changing in major
Chinese cities, but gay men and lesbians are still widely subject to strong
social and family pressures.
Often without siblings, due to the
country’s one-child policy, they must contend with parental insistence that
they have grandchildren, and so frequently resign themselves to heterosexual
marriages while keeping their true sexual orientation secret.

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