Sir Ian McKellen joins march against ‘appalling’ LGBTQ+ laws in Commonwealth
The march highlighted colonial-era laws in 29 Commonwealth countries, with penalties reaching life imprisonment or death in some places.
- On Saturday, May 30, 87-year-old actor Sir Ian McKellen led the 'Commonwealth Walk of Shame' in London, protesting anti-LGBTQ+ laws in 29 Commonwealth nations starting outside the Nigeria High Commission.
- Colonial-Era laws originally imposed by the British Empire still criminalize same-sex relationships in these countries; McKellen described the situation as 'appalling,' noting many bans were 'exported there' by 'cruel' colonial legislation.
- Organized by the Peter Tatchell Foundation and Out and Proud African LGBTI, the demonstration included refugees who fled persecution, with marchers visiting high commissions of eight countries including Uganda and Bangladesh.
- Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell urged Commonwealth Secretary-General Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey to address the issue, stating anti-LGBT+ victimization is incompatible with Commonwealth values. Protesters held signs demanding the King 'apologise for previous monarchs' and '75 years' of persecution.
- McKellen stated he hoped the demonstration would 'nudge politicians' to discuss the issue, which he claimed is rarely on the Commonwealth agenda, emphasizing the march aims to show support for those hiding from discriminatory laws.
17 Articles
17 Articles
Sir Ian McKellen takes aim at Commonwealth over anti-LGBTQ+ laws: 'It's never on the agenda!'
Sir Ian McKellen led protesters through central London on Saturday as campaigners highlighted anti-LGBTQ+ laws that remain in force across dozens of Commonwealth nations.
Sir Ian McKellen leads protest against 'shameful' anti-gay laws
Jordan Hirst Sir Ian McKellen has protested against the criminalisation of LGBTQ+ folk across the Commonwealth, leading a “Walk of Shame” through […] The post Sir Ian McKellen leads protest against ‘shameful’ anti-gay laws appeared first on QNews.
Sir Ian McKellen joins march against ‘appalling’ LGBTQ+ laws in Commonwealth
The actor joined protesters in London to highlight laws in 29 Commonwealth countries where same-sex relationships are illegal.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 46% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium











