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World Pride 2025

WorldPride conference speaker unable to travel to D.C. after visa waiver program eligibility revoked

UK Black Pride co-founder Phyll Opoku-Gyimah visited Cuba earlier this year

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Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, co-founder of UK Black Pride, speaks virtually at the WorldPride 2025 Human Rights Conference on June 4, 2025. She said the U.S. revoked her eligibility to participate in the Visa Waiver Program because she traveled to Cuba earlier this year. (Washington Blade photo by Michael K. Lavers)

A prominent LGBTQ activist who lives in the U.K. said she could not travel to D.C. for the WorldPride 2025 Human Rights Conference because the U.S. revoked her eligibility to enter the country without a visa.

Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, the co-founder of UK Black Pride known as Lady Phyll, was supposed to speak at the conference’s opening plenary at the National Theater. Opoku-Gyimah instead spoke remotely.

She said the U.S. “revoked” her eligibility to participate in the Visa Waiver Program and use an Electronic System for Travel Authorization, or ESTA, to enter the country without a visa because she traveled to Cuba earlier this year.

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection website notes the State Department on Jan. 12, 2021, designated Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism.

President Donald Trump’s first administration ended eight days after he made the designation. Then-President Joe Biden in the final days of his administration said the U.S. would move to lift the designation as part of a Vatican-brokered deal that secured the release of prisoners on the Communist island. Brenda Díaz, a transgender woman with HIV who participated in an anti-government protest in 2021, is among those who the Cuban government released from prison.

The CBP website notes that with “limited exceptions, a traveler who is found to have visited Cuba on or after this date is not eligible for travel under the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) using an Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) and must apply for a visa to travel to the United States.”

“Additionally, a traveler who at the time of application for an ESTA holds dual nationality with both a VWP country and Cuba is not eligible for travel under the VWP using an ESTA and must apply for a visa to travel to the United States,” it reads. “If an ESTA has already been approved and it is later determined that the traveler has been present in Cuba or holds dual nationality with both a VWP country and Cuba, the ESTA will be revoked.”

“Ineligibility for an ESTA is not a bar to travel to the United States,” notes the CBP website. “Individuals who are not eligible to travel under the VWP may apply for a visa at any U.S. embassy or consulate.”

Opoku-Gyimah said she learned of the revocation “as I preparing to be with you.” Opoku-Gyimah in her remarks said she applied for a visa that would have allowed her to enter the U.S., but the first available appointment was not until later this year.

“Yet from afar, I’m here,” she said. “We don’t abandon our people.”

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CBP, has yet to respond to the Washington Blade’s request for comment.

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PHOTOS: Capital Pride Honors

Annual awards ceremony held at National Building Museum

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From left, Raven-Symoné presents Kriston Pumphrey with the Capital Pride Breaking Barriers Award at the 2025 Capital Pride Honors on Thursday, June 5. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

The 2025 Capital Pride Honors awards ceremony and gala reception was held at the National Building Museum on Thursday, June 5. Honorees included Cathy Renna, Jerry St. Louis, Ernest Hopkins, Lamar Braithwaite, Rev. Dr. Donna Claycomb Sokol, Kriston Pumphrey, Gia Martinez, Kraig Williams and SMYAL. Presenters and speakers included U.S. Rep. Mark Takano (D-Calif.), Amber Ruffin, Raven-Symoné and Paul Wharton.

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

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PHOTOS: Latinx Pride Party

‘La Fiesta’ held at Bunker

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'La Fiesta' was held at Bunker on May 29. (Washington Blade photo by Robert Rapanut)

La Fiesta: The Official Latinx Pride Party was held at Bunker on Thursday, May 29. The event was hosted by Lady J Monroe and featured performances by Mia Carlisle, Stefon Royce, Evry Pleasure and Alexis Carter St. James.

(Washington Blade photos by Robert Rapanut)

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World Pride 2025

U.S. Park Service closes Dupont Circle Park for WorldPride weekend

Shutdown order rejects D.C. police chief’s request to keep park open

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Dupont Circle Park will be closed this weekend. (Washington Blade photo by Michael K. Lavers)

The U.S. Park Service released an official statement on June 5 announcing it has decided to close Dupont Circle Park for the WorldPride weekend from 5 a.m. Friday, June 6 to 10 p.m. Sunday, June 8.

While not saying so directly, the statement rejects a request by D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith to rescind her earlier request last week to close Dupont Circle Park for the WorldPride weekend after hearing from members of the community objecting to the closure.

After receiving Smith’s initial request to close the park, the National Park Service issued an earlier statement saying it agreed with Smith’s request and that the U.S. Park Police concurred with the closure request. But up until it released its latest statement on June 5, the Park Service did not publicly state whether it would agree to keep the Dupont Circle Park open at Chief Smith’s request.

Park service workers began installing metal fencing enclosing the park at 5 a.m. Friday, according to Park Service spokesperson Mike Litterst, who sent the Washington Blade the closure statement at 5 a.m. Friday.

“This closure comes at the request of the United States Park Police (USPP),” the statement says. “In USPP’s professional opinion this closure is necessary for the maintenance of public health and safety and protection of natural and cultural resources in Dupont Circle Park,” it says.

The statement adds, “The USPP has concluded that this temporary closure is necessary to ‘secure the park, deter potential violence, reduce the risk of destructive acts and decrease the need for extensive law enforcement presences.’”

Citing MPD Chief Smith’s earlier letter to the Park Service requesting the closure before she rescinded her request, the statement points out that “multiple instances of damage” to Dupont Circle Park, including damage to its fountain, occurred during Capital Pride weekends in 2019, 2023, and 2024.

Gay Dupont Circle Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Vincent Slatt is among the community leaders and activists who have expressed strong objections to closing Dupont Circle Park for WorldPride weekend. Slatt and other activists have said potential damage to the park or acts of violence could be prevented by stationing police at the park rather than closing it. 

But the U.S. Park Service statement disputes that claim, saying, “Less restrictive measures will not suffice due to the security-based assessment of the USPP that this park area needs to be kept clear.” 

Ryan Bos, executive director of Capital Pride Alliance, the lead organizer of WorldPride 2025 D.C., has said no official WorldPride events were scheduled to take place in Dupont Circle Park. But Bos told the Blade that Capital Pride did not know whether other groups or individuals planned to hold an event there during WorldPride weekend.

“This temporary public use limit is not of a nature, magnitude, and duration that will result in a ‘significant alteration in the public use pattern,’” according to the National Park Service statement. “Other nearby park areas will remain open, this close will not impact any permitted events, and the closure will only last for the time that law enforcement agencies have determined is necessary to provide for public safety and resource protection,” it says. 

“It is pandemonium down here at Dupont Circle,” Slatt told the Blade in a 7 a.m. phone call on Friday. “All the news cameras are out here and they’re putting up the fences. It’s ridiculous,” Slatt said. 

“And traffic has ground to a halt,” he said, noting that Park Service work crews closed the inside street lanes surrounding Dupont Circle Park to install the fencing. “It’s a mess out here.”

David Fucillo, an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner from the Adams Morgan neighborhood, said he agrees with Slatt and others who say potential damage to Dupont Circle Park could be prevented by police presence rather than closing the park.

But Fucillo said the National Park Service’s decision to close the park for WorldPride weekend after having not closed it for previous Capital Pride weekends when they claimed damage to the park took place appears to be they are singling out WorldPride for biased treatment.

“It would seem they are trying to make a statement during WorldPride and Pride month,” he said. “It’s a shame they decided to do that this year as opposed to previous years.”

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