Mexico City outlaws gay conversion therapy and introduces jail terms for offenders

Gay conversion therapy providers can now face up to five years in prison under the city's new laws.

Members of the LGTBIQ+ community march during a Gay Pride Parade in Mexico City.

Members of the LGTBIQ+ community march during a Gay Pride Parade in Mexico City. Source: LatinContent Editorial

Mexico City’s regional congress on Friday approved a bill to criminalise gay conversion therapy, in a step hailed as a major victory for Mexico’s gay and lesbian community.

Methods applied by proponents of conversion therapy to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity have ranged from psychological counseling to religious instruction and even electroshock therapy.

The practice has become widely discredited in recent years.
An LGBTQ+ pride parade last month in Mexico City.
An LGBTQ+ pride parade last month in Mexico City. Source: Eyepix/Sipa USA
In a virtual session, Mexico City’s politicians passed the bill, which received broad cross-party support.

Conversion therapy providers now face up to five years in prison, with higher sentences for those who subject minors to the practice.

Under the new law, conversion therapy is defined as psychological or psychiatric measures or treatments which intend to “nullify, hinder, modify or undermine” the expression of a person’s gender identity or their sexual orientation.
Its approval makes the Mexican capital, which in 2009 was the first region of the country to legalise same-sex marriage, the first jurisdiction in Mexico to ban the practice.

Major efforts are underway in much of North America to outlaw conversion therapy. Several US states, including California, Colorado, New York and Washington, have also banned it.

LGBTIQ+ Australians seeking support can contact QLife on 1800 184 527 or visit  also has a list of support services.


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Source: Reuters, SBS


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