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Indian gay gaffe spotlights changing attitudes

NEW DELHI — The Indian gay community has made great strides in gaining acceptance in recent years, but a minister's description of homosexuality as "unnatural" this week shows that prejudices still…


NEW DELHI — The Indian gay community has made great strides in gaining acceptance in recent years, but a minister's description of homosexuality as "unnatural" this week shows that prejudices still run deep.Almost two years to the day after a landmark Delhi High Court ruling decriminalised homosexuality, Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad shocked gay rights activists Tuesday with his remarks at an HIV/AIDS conference.Homosexuality was "unnatural and not good for India" and "a disease which has come from other countries", he was quoted as saying, though he later said he did not consider being gay a disease.The condemnation from India's gay activists was quick and forthright, reflecting the growing confidence of a minority movement that is no longer scared of asserting its rights.Other signs of the community's increasing visibility include the sale of same-sex Valentine's Day cards and gay magazines, as well as the Bollywood blockbuster "Dostana", in which a mother welcomes her son's supposed boyfriend into her home.The country's first gay pride store was launched in an upmarket suburb of Mumbai in December 2009.But even on the streets of central New Delhi, one of the most liberal parts of India, many wondered why the comments by Azad, a Muslim from the violence-wracked region of Kashmir, had caused such a fuss in the media."Just because India is democratic doesn't mean anything goes. Some things are against nature and you can't change nature's laws," Shafi Billo, a 37-year-old travel entrepreneur, told AFP.He said he was "in total agreement" with the minister, a member of the ruling Congress party and holder of a masters degree in zoology.In a blog published Tuesday on the website of Indian media giant Zee News, journalist Deepak Nagpal wrote a column backing Azad's contention that homosexuality was unnatural."Men were never supposed to have sex with men (or for that matter, woman having sex with another woman) -- the structure of our body and incapability of two men (or women) to reproduce is ample proof of

last modification 2011-07-07 10:15:08

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