In Vietnam, an unlikely haven for gays - and a lucrative
market
A gay man is silhoutted
on a gay rainbow flag during a demonstration for gay rights in Hanoi,
Vietnam, November 24, 2015. Reuters
HANOI
- If it had been in business a decade ago, Nguyen Anh Thuan's
restaurant would have been a target for late-night police raids to arrest
lawbreakers and stamp out "social evils".
But Comga
Cafe, in the heart of Vietnam's capital, is no gambling den, after-hours bar
or front for dealing drugs. It is an enterprise friendly to people of all
sexual preferences in a country where conservative values are strong.
Yet Thuan is
experiencing success instead of resistance. Prejudice is giving way to some
liberalism, he says, in a country now one of Asia's most progressive on gay,
lesbian and transgender issues.
That has
spawned a niche market of an estimated 1.6 million Vietnamese at a time of
galloping growth, offering money-making opportunities to firms that provide
services from travel and weddings to insurance and healthcare.
"Our
business benefits a lot from the LGBT community," said Thuan, who also
advises businesses on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues, which
are often abbreviated as LGBT.
"Many LGBT
people hold high positions in big firms and don't have to hide themselves.
Society is more open to them."
Tran Khanh Sinh, a gay person, poses for a photo in front of lamps in the colours of the gay rainbow flag at Comga restaurant where he is working in Hanoi February 5, 2016. Reuters
While
transgender, gay and lesbian people are persecuted and even jailed in many
Asian countries, Vietnam has quietly become a trailblazer, with laws to
decriminalize gay marriage and co-habitation and recognize sex changes on
identity documents.
"I see
a lot more openness in Vietnam now," said Bach Linh, a lesbian.
"Many LGBT people make lots of money and want to spend it. This will
attract the attention of businessmen soon."
Seminars and
corporate-sponsored "Viet Pride" festivals get free rein, and state
media discuss once-taboo issues of sex and gender preferences.
It is
unclear what prompted the relaxation by the government, which has never
openly spelt out its policy.
The Justice
Ministry did not respond to questions from Reuters, and vice health minister
Nguyen Viet Tien, who was once quoted speaking in support of gay marriage,
told Reuters his ministry was not responsible for policy and declined to
comment.
Marketing
firms are tracking consumer trends among lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people, including private healthcare providers such as Safe
Living, which estimates such clients contributed about 30 percent of its 2015
profit.
MB Market
Makers, which specializes in development of what it calls "the uniquely
lucrative LGBT market", aims to include Vietnam in its 2016 consumer
research.
It recently
valued the Chinese market at $850 billion annually and the U.S. market at
$950 billion, though there are no comparable figures for Vietnam.
"Radical change"
Budget
airline VietJet Air is targeting the same audience, with a television
advertisement featuring an in-flight lesbian wedding.
"There's
no law against it, so why not?" Managing Director Luu Duc Kanh told
Reuters.
Vietnamese
transgender people have strutted the catwalk at a fashion event with rainbow
bridal dresses and a gay wedding.
"After
the show, dozens of LGBT customers came to me for my advice and to use my
designs," said organizer Caroll Tran.
In 2014,
USAID said attitudes had undergone a "radical change" from a decade
ago, when gay activity was treated as a crime and a mental health issue.
But family
problems, workplace discrimination and violence in schools persisted, it
added.
Vietnamese gay rights activist Luong The Huy (2nd R) attends a news conference with transgenders Ngoc Tu (L), Anh Phong (2nd L) and La Lam (R) in Hanoi. Reuters
Vietnamese
academic Luong The Huy said the changes reflected political will and greater
public discussion.
Randy Berry,
U.S. special envoy for human rights of LGBT persons, told Reuters that,
whatever its reasons, Vietnam had actively engaged with an issue neighbors
still consider taboo.
Gay sex is
illegal in Singapore and mainly Muslim Malaysia, where some states also
outlaw cross-dressing.
In Brunei,
sharia religious law forbids sodomy, and activists in Muslim-majority
Indonesia recently called growing hostility toward gays "a witch
hunt".
Thailand
does not formally recognize same-sex unions or sex changes, but a new
constitution is expected to include "third gender" provisions.
"Progress
in places like this shows it's completely possible to honor tradition and be
embracing of diversity," Berry said.
REUTERS
|
Thứ Ba, 1 tháng 3, 2016
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