17 Gay Pride Marchers Arrested At St Petersburg Russia




LGBT activists in St. Petersburg hosted a peaceful rally on Sunday while in Moscow, 17 gay rights campaigners were arrested at a similar event.
Gay rights supporters in both cities gathered to mark the 25th anniversary of the day the World Health Organization removed homosexuality from its disease classification, which took place on May 17, 1990. The day is now recognized by LGBT communities worldwide as the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia.

LGBT rights activists gathered in St. Petersburg with rainbow-colored flags and balloons, and banners calling for "love without borders," in a rally that proceeded without police interference.
The Sunday gathering at Field of Mars park in the center of the city had been approved by the authorities — despite Russia's law that bans gay "propaganda" in front of minors. Police were standing by to protect demonstrators from any opponents as well as to shield children who happened to pass by from the influence of "propaganda," Russian media reports said.
A little girl tried to approach the demonstration asking for a colorful balloon, only to be held back initially by both police officers, who warned against "propaganda," and rally organizers, who feared a "provocation," Open Russia news portal reported.
After a brief delay, however, she received a balloon, the report said.
Participants in the rally carried banners that read: "We choose love," "Love is not a sin," "The world is not black and white," and "Love without borders," according to photos posted online.
Some of the rally participants also carried signs reading "Glory to Putin," and "Russia, forward," the FlashNord news portal reported.
"It's tough, members of the LGBT community face lots of discrimination in their lives, at work, at school... people are faced with violence in the streets," said protester Nika Yuryeva.
In anticipation of a counter-rally by anti-gay activists, police established a large buffer zone around the gathering, while rally organizers arranged for several buses that could have whisked demonstrators away in case of any clashes, BBC's Russian Service reported.
But opponents failed to materialize, according to Russian media reports.
Notably absent was St. Petersburg's gay-bashing lawmaker, Valery Milonov, well-known for showing up at gay rights events to denounce their participants. However, his wife, Eva Liburkina, and a group of the lawmaker's aides showed up near the rally, Flash Nord reported.
Rally participants mocked the gay-bashing lawmaker by handing out lollipops shaped as his head, accompanied by a note that read: "Don't suck in St. Petersburg," media reports said.  
Demonstrators ended the gathering by releasing dozens of balloons in the colors of the rainbow into the sky, FlashNord reported.  
In the Russian capital, however, 17 protestors were detained by police at a failed flashmob, according to organizers.
Some 50 people assembled on a square outside a Moscow theater, but crowd control police showed up with a bus and started shoving the protesters inside before they managed to unfurl any banners or chant any slogans.
One of the organizers, Andrei Obolensky, said later that he and others were still detained at a police station, and only one of them had so far been released.
The LGBT community has come under increased pressure in Russia as President Vladimir Putin has charted a more conservative course since starting his third term in 2012.
A 2013 law against gay "propaganda" sparked an outcry among Russian rights activists and in the West. But partly reflecting the influence of the Orthodox church, many Russians back the law or have negative feelings towards gays.
 (MT / Reuters)


Pride in Independent Georgia goes without a hitch


Many in Georgia heaved a collective sigh of relief after pro-LGBT rights rallies went without clashes on May 17, the International Day against Homophobia.
Groups of activists assembled in several locations in the capital, Tbilisi, mainly to highlight the European Court of Human Rights’ recent decision to impose penalties on the Georgian state for failing to prevent attacks against participants in an anti-homophobia demonstration in 2012.
Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili construed the lack of violence as proof that Georgia “is a deserving, distinguished society and a civilized state.” But it also had to do with the LGBT community and their rights-defenders taking their precaution this time around. Mindful of assaults in 2012 and, especially in 2013, when a violent mob crushed a similar demonstration, the groups this year did not publicly announce the venues for their rallies.
One demonstration took place in a small downtown public garden. The rally was heavily guarded by police, with circles of cordons and busloads of police officers at the ready. Another group gathered on Vachnadze Street, where in 2013 police barely managed to rescue several LGBT activists from a de-facto lynch-mob. Still another group gathered in front of the justice ministry calling on it to implement the European Court of Human Rights’ decision.
In a May-12 judgment, the Strasbourg-based court ruled that the Georgian state should pay a total of 33,500 euros (roughly $38,181) to both individual and group plaintiffs for having failed to protect their right to safe assembly in 2012.
Some of the same individuals became victims of violence on a much larger scale in 2013.
Others appear bent on lending a foreign-policy dimension to these confrontations. Those who agitate in favor of closer ties with Russia maintain that the EU and its LGBT-tolerant policies run counter to Georgian traditions (an argument that also has been made in Armenia about Armenian traditions).
On May 17, a small collection of poster-toting protesters, including several priests, gathered in front of the European Union’s office in Tbilisi to denounce "propaganda for homosexuals."
But beyond that, activism by both sides was scattershot and peaceful, and much of the debate took place online and on TV as it should.

by Giorgi Lomsadze   

Comments