US President Barack Obama has condemned psychiatric
therapies designed to "repair" gay, lesbian and transgender youth.
Mr Obama's statement was in response to an online petition
calling for a ban on conversion therapies. It gained over 120,000 signatures in
three months.
The petition was inspired by Leelah Alcorn, a 17-year-old
transgender youth who committed suicide in December.
Some conservative groups and religious doctors support
conversion therapy.

"As part of our dedication to protecting America's
youth, this administration supports efforts to ban the use of conversion
therapy for minors."
Vigils were held after Ms Alcorn committed suicide in
December
Vigils were held after Ms Alcorn committed suicide in
December
Counselling and prayer is used in conversion therapy to help
some Christians deal with gay urges.
"We believe that change is still possible. People go to
therapy because they can change, because it really does work," David
Pickup, a family therapist in California and Texas, told the New York Times.
"We help people grow into their authentic selves."
But mental health groups and gay rights activists say it can
increase the risk of depression or suicide.
The US states of California and New Jersey have banned the
practices. But other conservative states such as Oklahoma are considering
legislation to protect the therapies from legal challenges.
While the White House is not explicitly calling for
congressional legislation to ban the therapies nationwide, Mara Keisling, the
executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, welcomed Mr
Obama's statement.
"Having President Obama and the weight of the White
House behind efforts to ban conversion therapy is so critical in the fight for
transgender and LGBT young people," Ms Keisling said.
In the letter posted on Tumblr, Ms Alcorn said she killed
herself after years of struggling with her strict Christian parents' refusal to
acknowledge her true identity as a female.
She ended her note with a plea: "The only way I will
rest in peace is if one day transgender people aren't treated the way I was...
My death needs to mean something. Fix society. Please."
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