Source: Human Rights Watch
Dispatches: ‘Conversion Therapy’ in China Ruled ‘False’
Graeme Reid
On waking from an afternoon nap, first century Chinese Emperor Ai of the
Han Dynasty (27 to 1 BC) cut off his sleeve rather than wake his male
lover, Dong Xiang, who was sleeping across it. For two thousand years
same-sex love has been referred to in China as “the passion of the cut
sleeve.”
Sharing this passion, but under pressure from his parents to get married
and produce a grandchild, last February 30-year-old Yang Teng, who
comes from a small Chinese village, voluntarily signed up for conversion
therapy when he saw an online advertisement. The “treatment” included
hypnosis and electric shock that left him physically hurt and mentally
scarred.
Yang went on to sue both the company that advertised and the clinic that
provided the treatment and won. In a decision that should be
celebrated, and should prompt the Ministry of Health to outlaw such
“treatments,” a Beijing court ruled on December 19 that such therapy is
‘false’ and noted that homosexuality is not an illness under Chinese
law. In fact, the Ministry of Health removed homosexuality from a list
of mental disorders in 2001 and homosexuality was decriminalized in
1997. Still, same sex partnerships are not recognized in China and there
are no laws protecting LGBT people from discrimination.
The case became a rallying point for China’s LGBT community. The Beijing
LGBT Center staged a mock electroshock session outside the court-house
when the case was heard in July. “Homosexuality is not a disease, we
don't need to be cured,” read a banner outside the courthouse. The
executive director of the LGBT Center, Xin Ying, said that some
professional hospitals and smaller private clinics offered conversion
therapies.
This case should set an important precedent in China and also
internationally where clinics – either for religious motivations,
financial gain, or both - offer damaging therapies on the false promise
of converting individuals to heterosexuality. ‘The passion of the cut
sleeve’ need never become ‘the love that dare not speak its name.’