BEIJING (REUTERS) - Chinese activists are rallying in their thousands to renew a push for same-sex marriage, making use of a rare window of opportunity to suggest revisions to a draft piece of legislation to include legal protections for the gay community.
After decades of Communist prudery about sex of all kinds, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Chinese have in recent years been openly tackling bureaucracy, legal uncertainty and entrenched social norms to assert their place in society.
But unlike neighbouring, democratic Taiwan, whose decision last year to give same-sex couples the right to marry gave a fillip to the gay rights movement across Asia, China has not budged.
Two years after a Chinese court rejected his application to be legally married, Sun Wenlin is trying to galvanise the LGBT community by asking people to propose amendments to a draft civil code en masse.
The code, a piece of landmark legislation expected to be passed in 2020, was released last week by China's parliament for two months of public comment.
The code makes changes on issues including sexual harassment, divorce and family planning, but does not further the rights of the LGBT community, Sun told Reuters.
On Monday, Sun posted on his WeChat account a guide for how to submit revisions to write the legalisation for same-sex marriage into the code.
Sun's post went viral and started trending on the Twitter-like Weibo, with related hashtags being viewed 50 million times. Signatories to Sun's campaign for same-sex marriage legalisation, launched last year, jumped from around 5,000 to over 20,000 in a day, he said.
The chance that suggested revisions to dozens of provisions will be accepted is "close to zero", Sun said, but he is hopeful that discussion can push forward legal recognition. Read more via StraitsTimes