World
Harris meets with Guatemala LGBTQ, HIV/AIDS activists
Roundtable took place during vice president’s first overseas trip

Two members of Guatemalan civil society who work with the LGBTQ community and people with HIV/AIDS participated in a roundtable with Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday.
Visibles Executive Director Daniel Villatoro and Ingrid Gamboa of the Association of Garifuna Women Living with HIV/AIDS are among the 18 members of Guatemalan civil society who participated in the roundtable that took place at a Guatemala City university. Rigoberta MenchĂș, an indigenous human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner, is among those who also took part.
Villatoro is among those who attended a virtual roundtable with Harris on April 27.
“When we met last time, I was so moved to hear about the work that you have been doing, the work that has been about helping women and children, indigenous, LGBTQ, Afro-descendants, people who have long been overlooked or neglected,” said Harris before Monday’s meeting began.
Visibles in a tweet acknowledged it participated in the roundtable.
“Today we participated in a meeting with the vice president of the United States to talk about development opportunities for Guatemala and the search for inclusive justice,” tweeted Visibles. “We, as an organization, spoke about the importance of addressing discrimination and acts of violence towards LGBTIQ+ people.”
Hoy participamos en una reuniĂłn con la @VP de Estados Unidos para hablar sobre oportunidades de desarrollo para Guatemala y la bĂșsqueda de justicia inclusiva. Como organizaciĂłn remarcamos la importancia de abordar la discriminaciĂłn y hechos de violencia hacia las personas LGBTIQ+ pic.twitter.com/cKcTs3qKTL
â Visibles (@visibles_gt) June 8, 2021
Villatoro after the meeting said corruption and “the political crisis in terms of justice with which we live in Guatemala” were two of the issues raised with Harris.
“Impunity does not allow us to live freely,” Villatoro told the Washington Blade. “But combating it will open doors to pursue other necessary actions to give us a better life with more opportunities and with respect for our dignity.”
Harris arrived in Guatemala on Sunday.
She met with President Alejandro Giammattei a couple of hours before the roundtable.
Harris, among other things, announced the creation of a task force with the Justice and State Departments that will fight corruption in Guatemala and in neighboring Honduras and El Salvador. Harris will travel to Mexico City before she returns to D.C.
Harris has previously acknowledged that violence based on sexual orientation and gender identity is among the “root causes” of migration from Guatemala and other Central American countries. State Department spokesperson Ned Price last month noted to the Blade during an interview ahead of the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia that protecting LGBTQ migrants and asylum seekers is one of the Biden administration’s global LGBTQ rights priorities.
The Congressional LGBT+ Equality Caucus and U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, urged Harris to raise anti-LGBTQ violence in Central America during her trip.
âAddressing human rights and rule of law as part of the root causes of out-migration in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras is a top priority,” said Meeks in a press release the Congressional LGBT+ Equality Caucus released on Monday. “I am pleased that Vice President Harris will visit Guatemala and encourage her to meet with local civil society leaders, including LGBTQI human rights defenders who often face multiple forms of discrimination at the intersection of race, ethnicity, sexual orientation and gender identity.”
Latin America
Protests, demands for rights define Pride month in Latin America
More than 3 million people participated in SĂŁo Paulo march

Activists across Latin America marked Pride month with massive demonstrations, cultural activities, and demands that their countries guarantee equality and protect LGBTQ people from violence.
From Santiago, Chile, to Mexico City, activists took to the streets to celebrate the rights that have been won and the many that are still pending.
Chile
The Pride march that the Movement for Homosexual Integration and Liberation (Movilh) and FundaciĂłn Iguales organized took place in downtown Santiago, the countryâs capital, on June 22. Authorities and the two organizations say more than 120,000 people participated.
Under the slogan âPride with memory and hope,â marchers demanded lawmakers approve a bill that would allow reparations for LGBTQ Chileans who Gen. Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship targeted. There were also calls for the government to promote an LGBTQ-inclusive educational reform.
âThis time we are marching on high alert,â said Movilh spokesperson Javiera ZĂșñiga. âFor the first time in decades, we are losing achieved rights. We demand the state wake up. The reform of the Zamudio Law has been stalled for 13 years.â
Marches also took place in ValparaĂso, Antofagasta, Temuco, and ConcepciĂłn, highlighting the growing visibility of transgender groups and feminist organizations.
Mexico
Mexico City on June 29 was the epicenter of one of the regionâs largest Pride marches.
More than 300,000 people participated in the march. ComitĂ© IncluyeT organized the 46th annual march under the slogan âNot one step back: rights are respected.â
Several organizations denounced the increase in hate crimes â Mexicoâs National Observatory of Hate Crimes notes more than 80 LGBTQ people have been reported murdered in the last year. They also urged Mexican lawmakers to criminalize transfeminicides across the country.
Argentina
Although Buenos Airesâs official Pride march takes place in November, the Argentine LGBT+ Federation and other groups in the Argentine capital and in other cities across the country in June organized activities.
More than 5,000 people on June 24 marched from Plaza de Mayo to the Argentine Congress to reject the governmentâs dismantling of public policies. President Javier Mileiâs decision to eliminate the countryâs Women, Gender, and Diversity Ministry and cut sexual health programs were among the moves the protesters denounced.
âToday Pride is also resistance to the adjustment,â pointed out Comunidad Homosexual Argentina, an LGBTQ advocacy group.

Colombia
Thousands of people in BogotĂĄ, the Colombian capital, and the cities of MedellĂn, Cali, and Barranquilla marched on June 29.
The marchersâ slogan was âdiversity is also peace,â in a context where violence against LGBTQ people remains high. Caribe Afirmativo, a Colombian LGBTQ rights group, notes more than 45 people from the community has been reported killed in the country over the last 12 months, with most of them trans women.
Organizations also demanded lawmakers resume debate of a bill that would extend comprehensive protections to LGBTQ Colombians. The measure has been stalled in Congress since 2023.
Brazil
More than 3 million people participated in the 28th SĂŁo Paulo LGBTQ+ Pride Parade that took place on the cityâs Paulista Avenue on June 22.
The parade took place under the slogan âLGBT+ social policies: we want the whole thing, not half of it.â Organizers demanded expanded access to health care, employment, and education for the most vulnerable communities, especially Black trans people. They also denounced ultraconservative figures who seek to curtail LGBTQ rights.
Peru and Paraguay
More than 15,000 people took part in a Pride march in Lima, the Peruvian capital, on June 28. Participants demanded lawmakers approve a trans rights law, which has been stalled in the Peruvian Congress since 2016, and recognition of civil unions.
Members of SomosGay, a Paraguayan LGBTQ rights group, and other organizations participated in a Pride march that took place in AsunciĂłn, the countryâs capital, on June 29.
The march took place without incident, despite threats and anti-LGBTQ hate speech on social media. Participants demanded an end to anti-LGBTQ discrimination and rhetoric from social and religious groups.
Central America
Upwards of 2,000 people participated in a Pride march in Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, on June 22. A Pride demonstration took place in San Salvador, the capital of neighboring El Salvador, on June 28.
India
Anaya Bangar challenges ban on trans women in female cricket teams
Former Indian cricketer Sanjay Bangarâs daughter has received support

Anaya Bangar, the daughter of former Indian cricketer Sanjay Bangar, has partnered with the Manchester Metropolitan University Institute of Sport in the U.K. to assess her physiological profile following her gender-affirming surgery and undergoing hormone replacement therapy.
From January to March 2025, the 23-year-old underwent an eight-week research project that measured her glucose levels, oxygen uptake, muscle mass, strength, and endurance after extensive training.
The results, shared via Instagram, revealed her metrics align with those of cisgender female athletes, positioning her as eligible for womenâs cricket under current scientific standards. Bangarâs findings challenge the International Cricket Councilâs 2023 ban on transgender athletes in womenâs cricket, prompting her to call for a science-based dialogue with the Board of Control for Cricket in India and the ICC to reform policies for transgender inclusion.
âI am talking with scientific evidence in my hand,â Bangar said in an interview posted to her Instagram page. âSo, I hope, this makes an impact and I will be hoping to BCCI and ICC talking with me and discussing this further.âÂ
On Nov. 21, 2023, the ICC enacted a controversial policy barring trans women from international womenâs cricket. Finalized after a board meeting in Ahmedabad, India, the regulation prohibits any trans player who has experienced male puberty from competing, irrespective of gender-affirming surgery or hormone therapy. Developed through a 9-month consultation led by the ICCâs Medical Advisory Committee, the rule aims to safeguard the âintegrity, safety, and fairnessâ of womenâs cricket but has drawn criticism for excluding athletes like Canadaâs Danielle McGahey, the first trans woman to play internationally. The policy, which allows domestic boards to set their own rules, is slated for review by November 2025.
Bangar shared a document on social media verifying her participation in a physiological study at the Manchester Metropolitan University Institute of Sport, conducted from Jan. 20 to March 3, 2025, focused on cricket performance. The report confirmed that her vital metrics â including haemoglobin, blood glucose, peak power, and mean power â aligned with those of cisgender female athletes. Initially, her fasting blood glucose measured 6.1 mmol/L, slightly above the typical non-diabetic range of 4.0â5.9 mmol/L, but subsequent tests showed it normalized, reinforcing the studyâs findings that her physical profile meets female athletic standards.
âI am submitting this to the BCCI and ICC, with full transparency and hope,â said Bangar. âMy only intention is to start a conversation based on facts not fear. To build space, not divide it.â
In a letter to the BCCI and the ICC, Bangar emphasized her test results from the Manchester Metropolitan University study. She explained that the research aimed to assess how hormone therapy had influenced her strength, stamina, haemoglobin, glucose levels, and overall performance, benchmarked directly against cisgender female athletic standards.
Bangarâs letter to the BCCI and the ICC clarified the Manchester study was not intended as a political statement but as a catalyst for a science-driven dialogue on fairness and inclusion in cricket. She emphasized the importance of prioritizing empirical data over assumptions to shape equitable policies for trans athletes in the sport.
Bangar urged the BCCI, the worldâs most influential cricket authority, to initiate a formal dialogue on trans womenâs inclusion in womenâs cricket, rooted in medical science, performance metrics, and ethical fairness. She called for the exploration of eligibility pathways based on sport-specific criteria, such as haemoglobin thresholds, testosterone suppression timelines, and standardized performance testing. Additionally, she advocated for collaboration with experts, athletes, and legal advisors to develop policies that balance inclusivity with competitive integrity.
âI am releasing my report and story publicly not for sympathy, but for truth. Because inclusion does not mean ignoring fairness, it means measuring it, transparently and responsibly,â said Bangar in a letter to the BCCI. âI would deeply appreciate the opportunity to meet with you or a representative of the BCCI or ICC to present my findings, discuss possible policy pathways, and work towards a future where every athlete is evaluated based on real data, not outdated perceptions.â
Before her transition, Bangar competed for Islam Gymkhana in Mumbai and Hinckley Cricket Club in the U.K., showcasing her talent in domestic cricket circuits. Her father, Sanjay Bangar, was a dependable all-rounder for the Indian national cricket team from 2001 to 2004, playing 12 test matches and 15 One Day Internationals. He later served as a batting coach for the Indian team from 2014 to 2019, contributing to its strategic development.
Cricket in India is a cultural phenomenon, commanding a fanbase of more than 1 billion, with more than 80 percent of global cricket viewership originating from the country.
The International Cricket Council, the sportâs governing body, oversees 12 full member nations and more than 90 associate members, with the U.S. recently gaining associate member status in 2019 and co-hosting the 2024 ICC Menâs T20 World Cup. The BCCI generated approximately $2.25 billion in revenue in the 2023â24 financial year, primarily from the Indian Premier League, bilateral series, and ICC revenue sharing. The ICC earns over $3 billion from media rights in India alone for the 2024â27 cycle, contributing nearly 90 percent of its global media rights revenue, with the BCCI receiving 38.5 percent of the ICCâs annual earnings, approximately $231 million per year.
Womenâs cricket in India enjoys a growing fanbase, with over 300 million viewers for the Womenâs Premier League in 2024, making it a significant driver of the sportâs global popularity. The International Cricket Council oversees womenâs cricket in 12 full member nations and over 90 associate members, with the U.S. fielding a womenâs team since gaining associate status in 2019 and competing in ICC events like the 2024 Womenâs T20 World Cup qualifiers. The BCCI invests heavily in womenâs cricket, allocating approximately $60 million annually to the WPL and domestic programs in 2024â25, while contributing to the ICCâs $20 million budget for womenâs cricket development globally. Indiaâs media market for womenâs cricket, including WPL broadcasting rights, generated $120 million in 2024, accounting for over 50 percent of the ICCâs womenâs cricket media revenue.
âAs a woman, I feel when someone says that they are women, then they are, be trans or cis. A trans woman is definitely the same as a cis woman emotionally and in vitals, and specially, when someone is on hormone replacement therapy. Stopping Anaya Bangar from playing is discrimination and violation of her rights. It is really sad and painful that every transwoman need to fight and prove their identity everywhere,â said Indrani Chakraborty, an LGBTQ rights activist and a mother of a trans woman. âIf ICC and BCCI is stopping her from playing for being transgender, then I will say this to be their lack of awareness and of course the social mindsets which deny acceptance.â
Chakraborty told the Blade that Bangar is an asset, no matter what. She said that the women’s cricket team will only benefit by participation, but the discriminating policies are the hindrance.
âActually the transgender community face such discrimination in every sphere. In spite of being potent, they face rejection. This is highly inhuman. These attitudes is regressive and will never let to prosper. Are we really in 2025?,â said Chakraborty. âWe, our mindset and the society are the issues. We, as a whole, need to get aware and have to come together for getting justice for Anaya. If today, we remain silent, the entire community will be oppressed. Proper knowledge of gender issues need to be understood.â
The BCCI and the International Cricket Council have not responded to the Bladeâs repeated requests for comment.
El Salvador
La marcha LGBTQ desafĂa el silencio en El Salvador
Se realizĂł el evento en San Salvador bajo la lluvia, pero con orgullo

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador â El reloj marcaba el mediodĂa cuando los primeros colores del arcoĂris comenzaron a ondear frente a la emblemĂĄtica Plaza del Divino Salvador del Mundo. A pesar de la incertidumbre generada en redes sociales, donde abundaban los rumores sobre una posible cancelaciĂłn de la marcha por la diversidad sexual, la ciudad capital comenzaba a llenarse de esperanza, de resistencia y de orgullo.
Este año, la Marcha del Orgullo LGBTQ+ en El Salvador se desarrollĂł en un contexto tenso, en medio de un clima polĂtico que reprime y silencia a las voces disidentes.
“Aunque las estadĂsticas digan que no existimos, viviendo en El Salvador, un paĂs donde hoy, despuĂ©s de dĂ©cadas de avances, defender los derechos humanos es de nuevo una causa perseguida, criminalizada y silenciada”, afirmaron representantes de la FederaciĂłn Salvadoreña LGBTQ+.
A pesar de la cancelación del festival cultural que usualmente acompaña la marcha, los colectivos decidieron seguir adelante con la movilización, priorizando el sentido original de la actividad: salir a las calles para visibilizarse, exigir respeto a sus derechos y recordar a quienes ya no estån.
A la 1:30 p.m., una fuerte lluvia comenzĂł a caer sobre la ciudad. Algunas de las personas presentes corrieron a refugiarse, mientras otras, debajo de sombrillas y de los escasos ĂĄrboles en la plaza, decidieron mantenerse firmes. Los comentarios pesimistas no se hicieron esperar: “a lo mejor la cancelan por el clima”, “no se ve tanta gente como otros años”. Sin embargo, lo que siguiĂł fue una muestra de resistencia: a las 2:05 p.m. las voces comenzaron a llamar a tomar las calles.
Visibilidad como resistencia
La marcha arrancĂł bajo una llovizna persistente. La Avenida Roosevelt y la Alameda Juan Pablo II se tiñeron de colores con banderas arcoĂris, trans, lĂ©sbicas, bisexuales y otras que representan a los diversos sectores de la poblaciĂłn LGBTQ. Cada bandera alzada fue un acto polĂtico, cada paso una declaraciĂłn de existencia.
Desde la Plaza del Divino Salvador del Mundo hasta la Plaza Gerardo Barrios, frente a Catedral Metropolitana y el Palacio Nacional, la marcha se convirtiĂł en un carnaval de dignidad. Carteles con frases como “El amor no se reprime”, “Mi existencia no es delito” o “Marcho por quien ya no puede hacerlo” se alzaron entre las multitudes.
La movilizaciĂłn fue tambiĂ©n un espacio para recordar a quienes han perdido la vida por la discriminaciĂłn y el rechazo. Familias que marcharon por hijos, hijas o amigues que se suicidaron a causa del estigma. Personas que caminaron por quienes aĂșn viven en el miedo, por quienes no pudieron salir del clĂłset, por quienes se han ido del paĂs huyendo de la violencia.
Arte, fe y rebeldĂa
Una de las escenas mĂĄs llamativas fue protagonizada por Nelson Valle, un joven gay que marchĂł vestido como sacerdote.
“Hay muchas personas que secretamente asisten a ritos religiosos como en Semana Santa, y les gusta vivir en lo oculto. Pero la fe debe ser algo libre porque Dios es amor y es para todos”, dijo.
Valle utilizĂł su vestimenta como una forma de protesta contra las estructuras religiosas que aĂșn condenan la diversidad sexual.
“Un ejemplo de persona que abriĂł el diĂĄlogo del respeto fue el papa Francisco, abriĂł la mente y muy adelantado a su tiempo, porque dejĂł claro que hay que escuchar a toda persona que quiere encontrar a Dios”, agregĂł.
La marcha tambiĂ©n incluyĂł bandas musicales, grupos de cachiporristas, carrozas artĂsticas, colectivos provenientes de distintos puntos del paĂs, y manifestaciones de orgullo en todas sus formas. Fue un mosaico cultural que mostrĂł la riqueza y diversidad de la poblaciĂłn LGBTQ en El Salvador.

Una lucha que persiste
Las organizaciones presentes coincidieron en su mensaje: la lucha por la igualdad y el reconocimiento no se detiene, a pesar de los intentos del Estado por invisibilizarlos.
“Nuestros cuerpos se niegan a ser borrados y a morir en la invisibilidad de registros que no guardan nuestros nombres ni nuestros gĂ©neros”, declararon representantes de la FederaciĂłn.
AdemĂĄs, agregaron: “Desde este paĂs que nos quiere callar, levantamos nuestras voces: ÂĄLa comunidad LGBTIQ+ no se borra! ÂĄEl Salvador tambiĂ©n es nuestro! Construyamos, entre todes, un paĂs donde podamos vivir con Orgullo.”
El ambiente fue de respeto, pero también de desconfianza. La presencia de agentes policiales no pasó desapercibida. Aunque no hubo reportes oficiales de violencia, varias personas expresaron su temor por posibles represalias.
“Marchar hoy es tambiĂ©n un acto de valentĂa”, comentĂł Alejandra, una joven lesbiana que viajĂł desde Santa Ana para participar. “Pero tenemos derecho a vivir, a amar, a soñar. Y si nos detenemos, les damos la razĂłn a quienes nos quieren ver en silencio.”
Rumbo al futuro
Concluida la marcha frente a Catedral y el Palacio Nacional, muchas personas permanecieron en la plaza compartiendo abrazos, fotos y palabras de aliento. No hubo festival, no hubo escenario, pero hubo algo mĂĄs valioso: una comunidad que sigue viva, que sigue resistiendo.
Los retos son muchos: falta de leyes de protecciĂłn y que apoye las identidades de las personas trans, discriminaciĂłn laboral, violencia por prejuicio, rechazo familiar, y una narrativa estatal que pretende que no existen. Pero la marcha del 28 de junio demostrĂł que, aunque el camino sea cuesta arriba, la dignidad y el orgullo no se borran.
La lucha por un El Salvador mĂĄs justo, mĂĄs plural y mĂĄs inclusivo continĂșa. En palabras de uno de los carteles mĂĄs llamativos de ese dĂa: “No estamos aquĂ para pedir permiso, estamos aquĂ para recordar que tambiĂ©n somos parte de este paĂs”.
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