BGO Gemini
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Founded | 1992 |
Headquarters | Sofia Bulgaria |
Ideology |
LGBT rights Homosexuality Bisexuality Pro-Europeanism Anti-fascism |
The Bulgarian Gay Organization Gemini was the primary organization in the LGBT rights movement in Bulgaria, based in Sofia.
It was legally registered in 1992 by an HIV-positive gay couple and since then has grown to become the main LGBT organization in the country. In 2006, it hosted the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) European Conference in Sofia. The theme was "We Are Family - Our Families in Europe and the European Family".
The organisation ceased operations in 2009.
BGO Gemini was established as an NGO in the Sofia District Court on September 9, 1992. It first launched a hotline, run by volunteers who gave advice to all who called with questions about HIV/AIDS and LGBT issues. From 1997 on, with the support of UNAIDS, Gemini provided social support and informational materials about HIV/AIDS.
In 2001, Gemini was jumpstarted and expanded its focus to more general LGBT issues. In that year it held the first legislative workshop in Bulgaria to discuss the situation of LGBT people in the country. The meeting, supported by the Open Society Institute, was attended by judges, politicians, journalists, policemen, and leaders of NGOs. It helped to establish ties that would lead to a grassroots movement for the decriminalization of homosexuality and other advances in LGBT rights.
The next important step Gemini took was participating in the Balkan Triangle Project, which lasted from 2001 to 2004. Collaborating with COC Nederland and Accept Romania, Gemini aimed to establish itself as the national advocacy organization for the rights of LGBT Bulgarians, and did so successfully.
In 2002, it organized its first large-scale advocacy campaign: to decriminalize homosexuality under the Bulgarian Penal Code. In September of that year, Article 157 of the Code was modified so that gays and lesbians could live their lives openly.
The next year, Gemini gained a valuable ally: General Boyko Borisov. The Secretary General of the Ministry of the Interior, the highest ranked person in Bulgaria who later became the mayor of the capital city, became the first public supporter of Gemini and its community. Also in 2003, Gemini worked with Population Services International on reducing the transmission of HIV in high-risk groups.