Turkish capital bans all public LGBTQ events

All LGBTQ film screenings, theater performances and exhibitions are "banned until further notice."
 By 
Johnny Lieu
 on 
Turkish capital bans all public LGBTQ events
The Gay Pride March in Istanbul in 2014. The event has been banned each year for the past three years. Credit: Jodi Hilton/NurPhoto/Corbis via Getty ImageS

Turkey's capital Ankara has banned public LGBTQ events until further notice, with safety concerns cited for the prohibition.

In a statement by the Ankara Governor's Office on Sunday, all LGBTQ "cinema, theater performances, panels, interviews and exhibitions are banned until further notice in our province, in order to provide peace and security" from Nov. 18, according to a translation by Hurriyet.

The governor's office stated it discovered "a number" of LGBTQ events were being planned in the province via social and traditional media, and said they posed issues for public order.

"A part of society with different qualities in terms of social class, race, religion, sect, or region could therefore explicitly incite another part [of the society] to grudges and enmity, posing an open and imminent danger in terms of public safety," the statement added.

The announcement follows a ban on a LGBTQ film festival, Pink Life QueerFest, organized with the German embassy. The festival was set to take place on Nov. 16 and 17, featuring four films screening in Ankara cinemas.

"Suggesting that these screenings could be provocative or targeted by terror groups only serves to legitimize those people and institutions that produce hate speech towards us and see our existence as a threat," the festival's statement reads, as per a translation by Hurriyet.

"It only goes to deprive us of our constitutional rights under the name of 'protection.'"

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The rainbow flag hangs outside the German embassy in the Turkish capital Ankara in support of the LGBTQ community. Credit: ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images

In another statement issued by the festival and jointly with Turkish LGBTQ rights organisation KAOS GL on Sunday, it announced that legal proceedings will be taken against the governor's office on the ban.

"There can be no legitimate or legal grounds for such a wholesale ban that touches the core of rights," it reads.

"We expect this decision to be rethought and withdrawn in the shortest amount of time. In our country where discrimination and hate based on sexual orientation and gender identity is rampant, it is the duty of national and local administrations to combat this discrimination and hate."

Homosexuality is not illegal in Turkey. Despite this, Istanbul's Pride Week has been banned by authorities three years a row.

This year, Istanbul's governorship also gave public order and safety as reasons for the ban on the LGBTQ event.

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Johnny Lieu

Mashable Australia's Web Culture Reporter.Reach out to me on Twitter at @Johnny_Lieu or via email at jlieu [at] mashable.com

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