Advertisement

Gay people beaten and raped to ‘cure’ them of homosexuality in Ecuador’s ‘rehab clinics’

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
People participate in a Gay Pride parade in Quito, Ecuador, on July 3, 2011. Although homosexuality is not illegal in the country, there are reports of dangerously abusive practices to ‘cure’ gay people. Photo: Shutterstock

For more than ten years gay people in Ecuador have been forced to undergo “conversion therapy” in secret clinics where they are raped and beaten, even though homosexuality is legal, campaigners have said.

Advertisement

Scores of unlicensed rehabilitation clinics in the Andean nation offer illegal “treatments” for gay people based on the idea that homosexuality is a mental illness that needs to be “cured”, local rights groups said.

“Corrective therapy, in mostly private and clandestine alcohol and drug addiction clinics, continues in Ecuador,” said Cayetana Salao, of Taller de Comunicacion Mujer, a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights group. “It’s a reality.”

Taller de Comunicacion Mujer documented testimonies of four victims who said they were locked up against their will and underwent conversion therapy from 2014 to 2016.

Unidentified people participate in a Gay Pride parade in Quito, Ecuador, on July 3, 2011. Stock photo ID: 117772687
Unidentified people participate in a Gay Pride parade in Quito, Ecuador, on July 3, 2011. Stock photo ID: 117772687
A morbid creativity for torture exists ... no one regulates or monitors [the conversion camps]
Ane Barragan, anti-conversion campaigner

This included psychological and physical abuse – beatings, solitary confinement, being chained to a bed for days, force-feeding of medicine and being made to wear make-up and high heels.

loading
Advertisement