Advertisement

Homosexuality can be called a mental disorder, rules Chinese court

<p>File image: In 2019, a Chinese artist and a gay policeman launched an unusually high-profile public protest campaign in which bright-red trucks bearing slogans denouncing homosexual

File image: In 2019, a Chinese artist and a gay policeman launched an unusually high-profile public protest campaign in which bright-red trucks bearing slogans denouncing homosexual

(AFP)" />

A court in China has agreed with a textbook’s description of homosexuality as a mental disorder, upholding a ruling by a lower court.

The decision of the Suqian Intermediate People’s Court in the eastern province of Jiangsu was called “random and baseless” by Ou Jiayong, also known as Xixi, who had filed the lawsuit.

In 2016, Xixi had discovered a psychology textbook that described being gay as a mental disorder during her studies at the South China Agricultural University in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, reported the South China Morning Post.

In 1990, the World Health Organisation declassified homosexuality as a mental disorder following which China followed suit and decriminalised homosexuality in 1997. Two years later, in 2001, China removed it from the official list of mental disorders.

The textbook, being used by a number of Chinese universities, is the 2013 edition of Mental Health Education for College Students published by Jinan University Press. It has listed homosexuality under “common psychosexual disorders” along with cross-dressing and fetishism.

Following this, Xixi, 24, and her friends protested against it in front of the office of the textbook’s publisher. They argue that the book is perpetuating the belief that being gay was wrong and then, in 2017, filed a case against the publisher asking it to remove the reference.

But, last year, the Suyu District People’s Court in Suqian held that opposing views of Xixi and the publisher were due to differences in opinion instead of being a factual error.

As a result, in November 2020, Xixi, who is now a social worker in Hong Kong, appealed against the ruling which has now again not gone in her favour.

Her case and subsequent appeal had generated serious support from China’s LGBT community but the court’s decision last week has left them disappointed. But she is not calling it quits and discussing with legal experts to see if there is any possibility to take the case further.

Ah Qiang, an activist for LGBT rights, stated that the textbook’s editor has used viewpoints that do not match “society’s perception of sexual minorities” in the present times.

Read More

Taylor Swift leads celebrations after US House passes LGBT+ rights act

More than twice as many young LGBT+ people are worried about their mental health on a daily basis, study finds

Record number of Americans now identify as LGBT+

House of Lords Speaker steps down to campaign on HIV/Aids and LGBT rights

MI6 chief apologises for ‘wrong, unjust and discriminatory’ treatment of LGBT+ recruits