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Timeline of LGBTQ history in Panama
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is a timeline of notable events related to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) community in Panama.
Before the 20th century
1513

- September 24: Spanish conquistador Vasco Núñez de Balboa executes around 40 indigenous people accused of having sexual relationships with people of the same sex in the Carecuá comarca, in the region corresponding to present-day Panama. The accused people were thrown to a group of war dogs that mauled them to death.[1][2][3]
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20th century
1949
1957
- Writer Tristán Solarte publishes the novel El ahogado, which features one of the most notable LGBTQ characters in Panamanian literature.[7]
1972
- Writer Agustín Del Rosario wins the Ricardo Miró National Literature Award with his homoerotic poetry book De parte interesada.[7]
1984
1996
1998
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21st century
2001
2004
- The first edition of the Panama Pride Parade takes place.[15][16]
2008
- May: Enrique Jelenszky and John Winstanley, citizens of Panama and the United Kingdom, respectively, register their civil union at the British embassy in Panama.[17]
- July 29: President Martín Torrijos Espino issues Executive Decree N. 332, which decriminalizes homosexuality in Panama. The decree goes into effect on July 31.[4][5]
2010
2011
- May 29: An LGBTQ kiss-in takes place in front of the Metropolitan Cathedral of Panama City as a response to the detention by the police of two lesbian women who kissed at the same place a few weeks earlier.[19][20][21]
2013
- The short film Los agustines is released, which is considered the first openly LGBTQ Panamanian film.[22]
2016
2017

- July 1: The Panama Pride Parade was attended for the first time by the country's first lady, namely Lorena Castillo, who served as the parade's grand marshal.[25][26]
2019
- October 28: The National Assembly of Panama approves in a first vote a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage (which was already banned in a statutory law).[27] However, this vote led to civilian protests and president Laurentino Cortizo called on the Assembly to backtrack the amendment, which was eventually done.[28][29][30]
2021
- The beauty pageant Señorita Panamá, which was the local contest to choose the country's representative to Miss Universe, begins accepting transgender women as contestants.[31]
2023
- March 1: The Supreme Court of Justice of Panama issues a ruling in which it declares that the same-sex marriage ban present in the country's statutory laws was not unconstitutional.[32][33]
- March 24: The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights makes a call to Panama to guarantee the right of same-sex couples based on the OC-24/17 Advisory Opinion and regretted the Supreme Court's ruling against same-sex marriage earlier that month.[34]
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See also
References
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