Thousands of LGBTQ+ activists defy authorities’ ban on marching in Belgrade

Thousands of members of the LGBTQ + community marched in Belgrade on Saturday under heavy police protection despite the ban on this Europride march by the authorities, who arrested 64 people.

The parade itself, supposed to be the high point of this pan-European event which takes place each year in a different city, passed off without notable incident. But according to local media, clashes pitted the police against counter-demonstrators.

The Serbian Interior Ministry had banned the march on Tuesday, citing security concerns as far-right groups threatened to stage their own protests after a series of counter-Pride in the capital.

The demonstrators were nevertheless able to travel a few hundred meters on Saturday in the rain, between the Constitutional Council and a nearby park, a much shorter journey than the pride march initially planned.

Interior Minister Aleksandar Vulin assured that the ban had been applied, and that it was about people “escorted to a concert”.

Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabic, openly lesbian, announced that 64 people had been arrested and 10 police officers injured on Saturday, while stressing that she was “proud” that the day ended “without serious incident”.

Large riot police had been deployed around the rally and repelled small groups of counter-protesters brandishing crosses and religious insignia, according to AFP journalists.

The Home Office had also banned counter-demonstrations, but in far-right chat rooms, users had promised to protest Pride.

According to N1 television, clashes occurred between police and counter-demonstrators, the latter throwing smoke bombs at the police, several of whose vehicles were damaged.

AFP journalists saw several counter-demonstrators being arrested.

Rooted homophobia

Marriage between people of the same sex is not legal in this Balkan country of less than seven million inhabitants, where homophobia is deeply rooted despite some progress against discrimination.

“It’s about much more than a gay pride. We are fighting for the future of this country,” summed up Luka Mazzanti Jovicevic, a Serbian protester.

“I’ve been to several Prides but this one is slightly more stressful than the others,” said Yasmin Benoit, model and activist. “I’m from the UK where everyone is more supportive and it’s more commercial […] But here, this is really what a Pride should be,” she added, referring to the societal struggle at the origins of the movement.

The march ban had caused consternation among rights NGOs.

It’s a “shameful surrender, and implicit consecration of intolerance and threats of unlawful violence,” according to Graeme Reid, director of the LGBTQ+ rights program at Human Rights Watch.

Serbia has been the subject of intense international pressure: more than 20 embassies, including those of the United States, France, Germany and Japan, had called on it in a joint statement to reconsider its decision.

Serbia has been a candidate for EU membership for a decade, but member states have raised concerns over its human rights record over the years.

At least 15 members of the European Parliament took part in the Pride on Saturday to show their solidarity.

The Pride marches of 2001 and 2010 were targeted by the far right and marred by violence.

Since 2014, the Pride has been held without notable incident but under strong police protection.

Last weekend, thousands of people, motorcycle gangs, Orthodox priests and far-right nationalists, took to the streets to demand the cancellation of the parade.

“I am here to preserve Serbian traditions, faith and culture which are being destroyed by sodomites,” Andrej Bakic, 36, a counter-protester and member of a group, told AFP on Saturday. surrounded by riot police.

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