South Korea threatens to out LGBTQ people after 86 coronavirus cases linked to gay clubs
Anti-gay sentiment in South Korea has risen after health officials tracked 86 newly confirmed coronavirus cases to an asymptomatic 29-year-old man who visited bars and a bathhouse in Itaewon, the gay district in the capital city of Seoul. Other closeted gay people fear they may be outed to their families or employers if the government uses contact tracing to require them to get tested for COVID-19.
The man visited five locations King Club, Queen, Trunk, Soho and H.I.M. during the first weekend in May, soon after South Korea relaxed its social distancing measures to allow nightspots and other businesses to reopen amid declining case numbers.
Though the man admitted himself to a nearby hospital after he tested positive on Wednesday, May 6, health authorities have tested more than 2,450 people who went to same nightspots as him. The officials are still trying to track about 3,000 more people using credit card numbers, cell phone location data, and footage from CCTV cameras.
The Washington Post reports that since the outbreak, South Koreans searched mostly for gay club and gay coronavirus on local social media and have also posted hate speech and images claiming to show the filthy goings-on at gay bars that caused the infections. One of the posts included a video of bar patrons, asking others to help identify them.
The South Korean LGBTQ-rights group Chingusai said that stigma-inducing media reports could be counterproductive for infection-control efforts because These threats make it harder for those who came into contact with a virus carrier to report themselves due to fears of getting outed.
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