Thousands of Taiwanese revellers joined the Pride parade running through captial Taipei on Saturday, reported AFP.  It was a day for a colourful celebration of equality made possible by the island’s successful vanquishing of the coronavirus. Taiwan has not reported a single case of COVID-19 in the last 200 days. Social distancing and other measures seemed like a yesterday thing, as the crowd with rainbow coloured flags and and balloons marched through the city.

“Taiwan is Asia’s first, which means most of our neighbouring countries do not recognise same-sex marriages,” Chien Chi-chieh, the secretary-general of the Taiwan Alliance to Promote Civil Partnership Rights, told AFP.

“So, if a Taiwanese has a partner from South Korea, Japan, Hong Kong, China, Malaysia, Vietnam, Philippines, they all can’t get married. There’s a huge number of couples like that in Taiwan,” she added.

Drag queen Wu Po-sung was wearing a hand-crafted red “wedding banquet” dress, the traditional colour of marriage in Taiwan complete with table settings.

“Gay marriage is now in its second year,” Wu told AFP. “I was hoping to be able to attend all of my friends’ wedding banquets and that’s why I am dressed like a wedding banquet.”

Saturday’s parade came a day after two same-sex couples joined a mass wedding hosted by the military for the first time in another gay rights landmark in Asia.

Over 4,000 gay couples have registered their marriages since the law change took effect last year when Taiwan became the first place in the region to allow same-sex nuptials.

Taiwanese LGBT groups held a smaller pride march in June, the traditional pride month in solidarity with gay communities around the world who were unable to celebrate because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Organisers estimated a turnout of 130,000 on Saturday  the 18th Pride march in Taipei down from last year’s record 200,000 participants, when many international visitors were still able to travel to the island.

In December 2016, approximately 200,000 protestors gathered around the presidential palace in Taipei asking for legalisation of LGBTQ marriage. However, in 2017 same sex marriage was deemed unconstitutional. On May 17, 2019, the constitution finally passed the same sex marriage. Taiwan is at the vanguard of the burgeoning gay rights movement in Asia and became the first place in the region to allow same-sex marriage in May 2019 after a bruising political fight.

Taiwan’s gay marriage law still contains restrictions not faced by heterosexual couples, including on adoption and foreign marriages. Currently, Taiwanese people can only marry foreigners from countries that also have gay marriage laws.

Taiwan is home to a thriving LGBT community and its capital is due to host Asia’s Gay Games next year.

But the issue has caused deep divisions on the island, especially among conservative religious groups and older generations.

President Tsai Ing-wen took a considerable risk in pushing for gay marriage. But she won a second term in January with a landslide.