| > This looks to me like the Western behaviour where they sanction the whole country to death because they don't agree with policies of people in power. If your policies put people at risk, limit to participation is a natural consequence. There is no conspiracy here. >I am an African. And I live in a country where such laws targeting LGBTQ has been enacted. FYI, Most people here have no idea what LGBTQ means and those who do don't give a damn. Those leading the making of laws and noise making are just populists after their bread. [These are facts, hoping they still matter] >If you feel so strong about attending the conference, no one is going to ask your sexual orientation at the airport. Tourists are coming in everyday. Qatar has just hosted the world cup, how many LGBTQ people were jailed? If you don't feel safe, just skip the conference or attend online. Bullshit. You are asking people to be invisible, when that's not practical or possible a lot of the time. You are just saying people wouldn't be offended if they don't have the information to be offended. That is not remotely the same as safety. Case in point: I'm visibly trans, I don't have a toggle for my appearance. I'd be turned around the border in most gulf states. Also, Quatar used the World Cup to crack down on their domestic gay population by (yes this is real) catfishing them, posing as foreigners looking to hook up. So to answer your question: A whole lot of them got jailed. |
But that should not be a reason to not fund conferences in those countries, conferences which are a way to learn, to discover new things.
What do you think about conferences organizers, of every country, having to put on their website a little explanation of the laws of their country.
Each explanation would be something:
"In our country, the law forbid XXX. We are very sorry for the people concerned by this law and we are sad about those laws. We would ensure that the conference space is a safe space but they should be aware of those rules still apply in the whole country.
In every case, always choose safety. We are missing you, we hope to have the chance to meet you in another time.".
I feel like installing a tradition of such a disclaimer for every tech conference in the world would:
1. Force people to acknowledge issues in their own country (instead of minimizing them). And I guess every country has its own problem.
2. Show support for the victims of those laws and, indirectly, showing supports for the victims in their own country
3. Advance the cause, change mentality. It forces locals and politicians to be confronted with the fact that international visitors (which every country is trying to attract) may disagree to the point of not coming to the conference.
4. It would be nearly risk-free for conference organizer as it could also be defended as a polite way to ask attendees to respect the law.