Cha’s LGBTQ muny has long had to al wh not only societal prejudice but also prsure om the state: censorship, surveillance and timidatn, at tim even tentn by police. Durg the early 2000s, though, looked like thgs might be changg. Gay clubs flourished big ci and muny groups sprang up to offer social servic. The days, the feelg has fad. While ’s difficult to pot to any direct crackdown, the realy is that over the past ’s bee to
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BEG GAY CHA HAS GOTTEN HARR UNR XI JPG
An advocy group that served as a safe space for the LGBTQ muny Beijg has been shut down as part of a ernment prsure mpaign agast gay rights groups. * lgbt party in beijing *
In rponse, some groups changed their nam, removg words that like “gay” or “sexual mory” that would easily trigger the censors, though was largely effective.
Terms like “gay” and “sexual mory” have disappeared om public view. But fact, acrdg to a 2016 report issued by the gay social work app Blued, Beijg has the hight number of LGBTQ people Cha, followed by Guangdong Provce, Jiangsu Provce and Shandong Provce.
A more assertive, self-reliant Cha has rulted a subtle but nstant narrowg of gay spac * lgbt party in beijing *
And another survey -anized by Blued, mobile news aggregator Yidian Zixun, and Che web mappg provir Gao the same year, showed that Sanlun, a fashn and mercial hub Beijg, is the most popular area for gay people, and one out of five mal (20 percent) intified themselv as gay.