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Veneta Limberova is the president of the LGBT youth movement “Deystvie” PHOTO: JASMINA PEEVA
A Bulgarian woman goes to the Netherlands for homophobia in our country, there she becomes a police officer
Doctors in a large metropolitan hospital have to schedule visits so that they do not find the bed of a woman in a medical coma, her mother, who does not approve of her homosexual relationship, and her partner, with whom they live.
However, before that, a lawyer from the LGBT legal community had to go to the health center to exercise the right to visit the couple. LGBT people cite the lack of regulation as an example.
The woman was admitted to the hospital as an emergency after suffering an injury and was placed in an artificial coma. He entered the emergency department conscious. She was accompanied by her partner, who took her belongings and personal documents. The injured woman explained to the doctors that the two were together and that her partner would be visiting. The doctors agreed.
Due to the very serious injuries, visits were limited. However, when the couple went to see their injured lover, they found their mother there. The mother did not accept her daughter’s homosexual relationship.
An emotional scene developed. The mother attacked not only with insults, but also with threats. He ordered the doctors not to allow his partner to go to his daughter’s hospital bed. They had no choice but to carry it out, because according to our legislation, the partner is a stranger.
However, the girl sought legal advice. So a lawyer had to go to the hospital and explain that he had the right to visit him. The doctors were understanding, but to avoid “fairs” in the hallways, they made a schedule of the two’s visits.
“If there were regulation, it would not come,” Veneta Limberova said. She gives another example.
A year ago, the LGBT organization joined a training program for police officers investigating hate crimes. They came in uniform from Holland. Among them was a Bulgarian policewoman in the Netherlands. He explained to his colleagues that he left Bulgaria after school because he knew that due to his homosexual affiliation he would encounter ridicule and hostility in our country.
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