Gay Games Hong Kong is legal, top gov’t advisor Regina Ip says, amid claims event is threat to national security
Hong Kong Free Press
Top government advisor Regina Ip has denied claims that Hong Kong’s Gay Games is a threat to national security, ahead of the inclusive sporting competition opening on Friday.
The fact that Gay Games Hong Kong 2023 were using a government sports centre as a venue showed that the international multisport and cultural event was not illegal, Executive Council convenor Ip said in a Facebook post on Wednesday.
Her remarks came hours after around 20 self-proclaimed “patriotic citizens” filed a petition at the legislature to oppose the event, which runs from November 3 and 11. They claimed that while the Gay Games appeared to be promoting diversity and cohesion, it was in fact displaying “invasive behaviour.”
The event also celebrated same-sex relationships and transgender people, which the petitioners said amounted to spreading the idea of “sexual indulgence” to the city’s young generation and “completely subverting Chinese culture and traditional family values.”
“Organising the Gay Games is inviting trouble and threatening national security,” a statement from the petitioners read.
“By infiltrating our culture, education, and legal systems, there is an attempt to undermine ethical values surrounding gender, marriage, and family and carry out a colour revolution,” they said.
Among the lawmakers who received the petition was Junius Ho, who said the agenda of pushing for same-sex marriage in Hong Kong was a “sugar-coated poison.”
“The agenda [of promoting same-sex marriage] contravenes our current constitution, our current laws and our national security law,” he said.
See also: Explainer: What is Hong Kong’s Gay Games and why has it seen so much controversy?
New People’s Party chairwoman Ip wrote on Facebook on Wednesday that many government departments, including the Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau, Commerce and Economic Development Bureau and InvestHK, had shown support for the Gay Games as people had sought to organise the event since 2016.
Hong Kong was named the first city in Asia to organise the Gay Games in 2017 but the event was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Ip said. The government eventually provided the use of Queen Elizabeth Stadium as a competition venue, which she said was proof that the event was legal.
“Hence the claims that the Gay Games breaches the law absolutely do not exist,” Ip’s post read.
She added she backed the Gay Games because she always opposed discrimination and supported equal opportunities. But the legislator said she had never promoted or supported the legalisation of same-sex marriage.
“I emphasise that it is not the case, and the legalisation of same-sex marriage will not occur in Hong Kong,” she wrote.
Ho said at the petition meeting on Wednesday that the Executive Council convenor may have her personal views, but all views must be exercised within the legal framework. Ip was aware of the anti-Gay Games press conference, he said, adding the petitioners should ask Ip directly why she had not attended the meeting or received the petition letters.
Whilst same-sex sexual activity was legalised in 1991, Hong Kong has no laws to protect the LGBTQ community from discrimination in employment, the provision of goods and services, or from hate speech. Equal marriage remains illegal, although a 2023 survey showed that 60 per cent of Hongkongers support it. Despite repeated government appeals, courts have granted those who married – or who entered civil partnerships – abroad some recognition in terms of tax, spousal visas and public housing.
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