Thousands take part in Seoul LGBT festival, protesters rally
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[July 16, 2022]
By DAE-WOUNG KIM and Yeni Seo
SEOUL (Reuters) - Thousands of South
Koreans took part in an LGBT festival in downtown Seoul on Saturday, as
Christian and conservative groups held a rally in protest across the
road.
Dubbed Seoul Queer Culture Festival, about 13,000 people were estimated
to have participated as of about 3pm local time, Yonhap reported.
Participants, some wearing rainbow masks and toting rainbow flags,
looked around some 72 booths opened by human rights groups, university
LGBT clubs, embassies, religious and progressive organisations, taking
part in face painting or social media events.
"I'm glad we can have an offline festival after a long time. LGBT people
are not hateful people who appear one day out of the year but people who
live their daily lives just the same," said Hurricane Kimchi, a drag
queen who attended the festival.
"The Queer Festival has gotten bigger, and many LGBT people show up
without hiding, because the perception in our society is getting
better."
The U.S. ambassador to South Korea, Philip Goldberg, attended the
festival to show his support.
"To express the strong commitment of the United States to ending
discrimination wherever it occurs and ensuring that everyone is treated
with respect and humanity, we simply cannot leave any of you behind,"
Goldberg told the crowd.
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A participant takes part in the Korea Queer Culture Festival 2022 in
central Seoul, South Korea, July 16, 2022. REUTERS/ Heo Ran
"We're going to fight with you for equality and human
rights."
Across the road from the festival, taking place in Seoul Plaza in
front of City Hall, the protest rally had at least 15,000
participants, according to the Yonhap news agency.
"We are protesting and holding a national convention for the healthy
sexual ethics of our children, and we are rallying together to call
for the proper operation of Seoul Plaza, which is run with citizens'
taxes," said Lee Yong-hee, a university professor and participant in
the protest rally.
Police were at the site to guard against possible clashes.
(Reporting by Daewoung Kim and Yeni Seo; Additional reporting by
Dogyun Kim and Heejung Jung; Writing by Joyce Lee; Editing by
William Mallard)
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