Thailand holds first official pride parade in 16 years, but fight for equality continues

While Thailand nation has a highly visible LGBTIQ+ community, many still face major hurdles and discrimination in the conservative Buddhist-majority kingdom.

Drag queens posing for a photo.

Drag queens at the pride parade in Bangkok on 5 June, 2022. Source: Getty, LightRocket / SOPA Images

Key Points
  • The event was organised by a coalition of non-governmental groups and was supported by the city new governor.
  • It was Thailand's first official pride parade since 2006.
Thailand's capital saw an explosion of glamour, gilt, and glitter on Sunday as the country's LGBTIQ+ community celebrated their first Pride parade in almost 16 years — but attendees warned true equality was still distant.

Bangkok's "Naruemit Pride 2022" — Naruemit means "creation" in Thai — was organised by a coalition of non-governmental groups with the city's newly ratified governor Chadchart Sittiput also throwing his weight behind it.

Allies and people of all genders, including drag artists, sex workers, feminists and even a few furries — people who are interested in or dress up as animal characters with human personalities — bounded down one of the megalopolis's main throughways for the first official parade since 2006.
"I feel so happy," said grinning drag queen Johnnie Phurikorn, who had paired his red lipstick with an exuberant scarlet ruffled dress for his first Pride.

"I feel glad and thankful to have this moment," the 31-year-old said, but added that his country needed to do more to support LGBTIQ+ individuals.
While the Southeast Asian nation has a highly visible LGBTIQ+ community, many still face major hurdles and discrimination in the conservative Buddhist-majority kingdom.

"I don't want people to think we are different," said Maysa Petkam, a competitor in transgender beauty pageant Miss Tiffany Universe.

"We don't want more rights than other genders, we only want basic rights," she said, noting how the community still faced daily discrimination.

"I wish same-sex marriage law passes so that there will be laws that protect and decrease gender inequality," she added, steadying her vertiginous crown as she emphasised her point.
A person holding a sign that reads "my body is my rights".
Sex worker rights activist at Bangkok's "Naruemit Pride 2022", Thailand's first official pride parade in 16 years. Source: Getty, LightRocket / SOPA Images

A right to love

For engaged couple Anticha Sangchai and Vorawan Ramwan, the question of marriage equality was particularly pertinent.

The pair in diaphanous white gowns caught the crowd's attention — and later social media — with their wedding ceremony in the midst of the parade.

"My beloved friends walk together and gave us a special moment in our life," Anticha told news agency AFP, calling the experience among the crowds an "honour".

Thailand's parliament has yet to legalise same-sex marriage, with the Thai cabinet in March pushing back a proposal recognising the unions equally.
A person wearing a bridal gown with a rainbow-coloured train that several people are holding.
Thailand's parliament has yet to legalise same-sex marriage. Source: Getty, LightRocket / SOPA Images
"Everyone has the right of raising a family, love and marriage with anyone they love," Anticha said.

"Why we can't do that as a human being?"

As the pair headed off with the end of the official parade, the party was not quite over.

A large group congregated under one of the city's metro stations — partially blocking a major road — and gave an impromptu drag show to songs by Madonna, Lady Gaga and Katy Perry.

It looked set to continue into the night as the crowd, many hanging over railings and crammed into street corners, screamed each performance as they chanted the lyrics of Perry's "I kissed a girl and I liked it".

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Published 6 June 2022 10:29am
Source: AFP, Reuters



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