Geneva (EFE) regularly monitors this issue.
The Geneva-based federation recalled today that LGBTI people still face the death penalty for their sexual condition in six states that are part of the United Nations (Brunei, Mauritania, Iran, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and Yemen). .
In addition, in another five (Afghanistan, United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, Qatar and Somalia) the safety of these people is not guaranteed by law.
ILGA also records that in 51 UN countries there are still regulations that violate freedom of expression in relation to gender and sexual diversity issues.
In eleven of these territories, these laws regulate the treatment of the LGBTI issue in education and in another 25 the contents disseminated by the media are specifically regulated.
Administrative barriers faced by members of the collective and organizations defending their rights are very restrictive in 55 United Nations states, according to ILGA.
On the other hand, the association recognizes that conversion therapies are only prohibited at the national level in eleven countries, while equal marriage is recognized in 33 UN member states and in Taiwan.
Homosexual couples can only adopt in around thirty countries
The adoption of children by homosexual couples is only possible in around thirty United Nations countries.
As for the legal recognition of gender self-determination, only 20 states allow it throughout their territory, while the option to define oneself as a non-binary gender in official documents exists in another twenty UN countries.
ILGA is made up of more than 1,800 LGTBI associations from more than 160 countries and territories around the world.