Landmark LGBT summit set for scrap after uproar over changes to planned conversion therapy ban
The Safe To Be Me event was due to be held in London in the summer, bringing together policymakers and activists "to protect and promote the rights of LGBT people around the world".
Wednesday 6 April 2022 08:44, UK
Plans for a landmark global LGBT conference in the UK this summer are to be cancelled after more than 100 groups pulled out following changes to plans to ban conversion therapy.
Organisations including Stonewall said they would no longer support the Safe To Be Me event due to take place in London following the decision to exclude transgender people from the ban.
The government admitted on Monday it meant the conference due to be held in June and July was now in doubt.
Now Sky News understands that the event is set to be cancelled.
What was the plan for the summit?
The conference would have coincided with the 50th anniversary of the capital's first official Pride marches.
It was billed as the UK's first ever global LGBT conference when it was launched by senior ministers Liz Truss and Dominic Raab last year.
The event promised to bring together officials, policymakers, activists, and experts "to protect and promote the rights of LGBT people around the world".
But the controversy over the government's back-and-forth stance on conversion therapy saw more than 80 LGBT+ groups and more than 20 HIV organisations pull out.
That was after the government last week changed plans for banning conversion therapy that had first been set out in 2018.
Read more: What is conversion therapy and what has the government's position been?
The practice attempts to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender identity and is outlawed in several countries.
But the government now plans to ban only gay conversion therapy, not trans conversion therapy - saying that in the case of the latter only that it would carry out further work to consider the issue.
In a statement on Monday, it said this was to ensure that the law did "not interfere in the work of legitimate therapists providing appropriate support for people with gender dysphoria who may be considering taking life-changing medication".
But the decision has prompted the UK's LBGT+ business champion Iain Anderson to resign, saying it was "profoundly shocking".
A government spokesperson repeated the position from Monday that it was "considering how to proceed" over the conference.
Cancellation of LGBT conference is a 'sickening waste'
Reacting to the event's cancellation, Conservative MP Dehenna Davison tweeted: "We had such a huge opportunity to prove the UK (and the Conservative Party) is a defender of freedom.
"As a Conservative member of the LGBT+ community, it is so wrong it has come to this."
Shadow attorney-general Emily Thornberry described the cancellation of the LGBT conference as a "sickening waste".
"For three years, I urged the government to use the opportunity they had as co-chair of the (intergovernmental) Equal Rights Coalition to take a global lead on LGBTQ+ issues," she posted on Twitter.
"For three years, they did nothing except talk up their 'Safe To Be Me' conference. And now where are we? What a sickening waste."
SNP MP John Nicolson said the cancellation of the event was a "humiliation" for Boris Johnson and the government.
Consortium, the umbrella body for LGBT+ voluntary and community organisations, said that it was a "sad day", adding that Downing Street was to blame for what happened.
"The implications of the international LGBT conference being cancelled is solely at the doorstep of No 10," it said in a statement.
"LGBT+ organisations were left with no choice but to withdraw any support in order to stand in solidarity and partnership with our trans communities.
"This is a sad day but one where we must begin to change the narrative and look to build a country where every person can feel safe and live a life with dignity and respect."