Colombian president pulls ‘transgender education’ plan after massive protests
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos has
cancelled all plans to impose “transgender education” on the nation’s schools
after massive
protests were
carried out last Wednesday throughout the country.
“We just met with Cardinal Rubén Salazar, the
Apostolic Nuncio, Ettore Balestrero, and Monsignor Fabio Suescún, the bishop of
Colombia’s armed forces,” Santos said in a press conference held the day after
the protests. “We clearly reiterated to these prelates of the Catholic Church —
and we must make it clear to all religious confessions — that neither the
Ministry of Education nor the national government has implemented, has
promoted, or will promote so-called gender ideology.”
Santos claimed that a Ministry of Education booklet on
teaching students to accept transsexualism and homosexuality wasn’t actually
official, despite bearing the name of Colombia’s lesbian education minister,
Gina Parody, and the logo of the Ministry of Education.
The booklet, produced in cooperation with the
United Nations Population Fund and UNICEF, had sparked outrage throughout the
country and was condemned by the Catholic bishops’ conference as well as
Colombia’s attorney general. It led to the Wednesday protests that drew tens of
thousands of outraged parents to the streets of several major cities, demanding
an end to the program and the removal of Parody.
“We reiterate what the Minister has been
saying in recent days: The document of the United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA) on school environments was published on the webpages of the United
Nations Organization for their discussion without authorization of the
Ministry, as said organization has recognized in a public communique,” Santos
said.
He added that the booklet, titled
“Non-Hegemonic Sexual Orientations and Gender Identities in Schools,” “will not
be authorized” for use by the Ministry of Education.
Colombia’s Attorney General skeptical about promises
Colombia’s attorney general, Alejandro
Ordóñez, expressed skepticism about the claims and told the press that “we
parents will be vigilant” regarding what he sees as an attempt by the
government to “indoctrinate” children with gender ideology.
“It’s been demonstrated that this booklet
exists. It’s been demonstrated that there was an inter-administrative
agreement,” Ordóñez said. “It’s been demonstrated that they’ve been giving
workshops to school principals for this purpose.”
“An education policy can’t be used to threaten
and seek to take away the rights of parents to decide the education of their
children,” he added, and warned that “the government must correct this because
we parents are not going to permit them to continue developing education policy
in this direction.”
Prosecutor threatens to sue Parody
Ordóñez has previously accused Parody of lying
about the material she’s distributing to schools, and one of his prosecutors is
now threatening to sue her over her claims that he fabricated evidence against
her.
On the eve of the march, Parody accused the
attorney general’s office of having circulated false “pornographic” images of
pages from her gender ideology booklet, prompting a strong condemnation from
prosecutor Carlos Meza Díaz, who said that her accusations were targeting him
for tweets that never claimed to associate the images with the booklet. The
attorney general’s office called for a retraction.
However, the following day, Parody refused to
retract her accusations and reiterated them, prompting Meza Días to announce
plans for a lawsuit against Parody.
On Wednesday, Meza Díaz told the El
Heraldo newspaper
that “the Minister this morning said that she’s not going to retract [her
accusation], and that I’m the one who must ask forgiveness of the country. ...
She knows that I haven’t promoted any pornographic materials and that I haven’t
carried out any campaign.”
Now Parody “will have to reflect” on her
statements “and the judges of the Republic will make the determination”
regarding her guilt, Meza Díaz said.
Parody expressed grief at the tens of
thousands of demonstrators who took to the streets to denounce her gender
ideology initiative and to demand her resignation, claiming it was part of a
“strategy of manipulation and lies.”
“As a woman, as a Colombian, I am grieved by
the insults that I heard in the protests that that were authored by groups of
politicians who carried out this whole strategy of manipulation and lies,” she
said. “Today the country had the opportunity to hear them.”
Parody said she would continue to seek to
“create equality of opportunities in education,” and asserted her “commitment
to make Colombia the best-educated country in Latin America.”