September 24: Spanish conquistadorVasco Núñez de Balboa executes around 40 indigenous people accused of having sexual relationships with people of the same sex in the Carecuá comarca, in the region corresponding to present-day Panama. The accused people were thrown to a group of war dogs that mauled them to death.[1][2][3]
20th century
1949
May 20: Executive Decree N. 149 is issued, which criminalizes homosexuality (named in Article 12 of the decree with the term "sodomy")[4][5] with a prison term of three months to one year.[6]
June 29: The Asociación Hombres y Mujeres Nuevos de Panamá is created, which is considered the first LGBTQ organization in the history of the country, although they lacked official government recognition during their first few years.[11][12][13]
1998
For the first time in history, LGBTQ people get authorization to participate in the official parade of the Panama Carnival. Conservative groups criticized this decision.[13][14]
21st century
2001
September 4: The Asociación de Hombres y Mujeres Nuevos de Panamá gains official government recognition from the Panamanian State.[11][12]
May: Enrique Jelenszky and John Winstanley, citizens of Panama and the United Kingdom, respectively, register their civil union at the British embassy in Panama.[17]
July 29: President Martín Torrijos Espino issues Executive Decree N. 332, which decriminalizes homosexuality in Panama. The decree goes into effect on July 31.[4][5]
2010
Actor Agustín Clément becomes the first Panamanian public figure to register his union with a person of the same sex, after registering his civil union (PACS) with his boyfriend, French citizen Cesar Pereira, in the French consulate of Panama.[18]
The short film Los agustines is released, which is considered the first openly LGBTQ Panamanian film.[22]
2016
May 6: Activist Candy Pamela González becomes the first Panamanian transgender woman to obtain authorization to legally change her name to one that reflects her gender identity.[23][24]
October 28: The National Assembly of Panama approves in a first vote a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage (which was already banned in a statutory law).[27] However, this vote led to civilian protests and president Laurentino Cortizo called on the Assembly to backtrack the amendment, which was eventually done.[28][29][30]
2021
The beauty pageant Señorita Panamá, which was the local contest to choose the country's representative to Miss Universe, begins accepting transgender women as contestants.[31]
2023
March 1: The Supreme Court of Justice of Panama issues a ruling in which it declares that the same-sex marriage ban present in the country's statutory laws was not unconstitutional.[32][33]
June 29: The first mass symbolic same-sex wedding ceremony was scheduled to take place in the country. The ceremony, organized by the lesbian pastor Maricarmen Gutiérrez,[35] was ultimately suspended by the Panama Pride organizers after receiving threats from extremist groups.[36]
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