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Gay Pride Events : International Pride Last Updated: Dec 30, 2007


Police Protect Participants at LGBT March in Romania
Jun 14, 2007

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The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) have applauded the Romanian authorities for ensuring the security of over 250 lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people and their supporters at an annual pride march in the nation’s capital of Bucharest that took place on June 9.

At the end of the weeklong LGBT festival, held for the third consecutive year, the Romanian LGBT community and their supporters held a "March for Diversity" in Bucharest. The organizer of the pride, the Romanian non-governmental organization ACCEPT, used the event to renew its demand for state recognition of same-sex couples’ equal rights and benefits, including marriage. As the march was in progress, an anti-gay group tried to aggressively interrupt the march, which forced the security forces to intervene. Police took into custody over 100 members of the anti-LGBT contingent. Media reports indicate that criminal charges were filed against five of the protesters for possession of homemade smoke bombs, while about 50 other were fined for disturbing the public order. 

Similar to the previous year, an anti-gay rally was allowed to take place earlier in the day. The anti-LGBT gathering, “March for Normality,” was organized by Romania’s neo-Fascist group “The New Right" (in Romanian “Noua Dreapta”). It attracted several priests from the predominant Christian Orthodox Church, which earlier publicly denounced the LGBT march. The participants carried neo-Fascist signs, including the stylized Celtic cross—the symbol of the New Right—and a portrait of Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, leader of the anti-semitic, ultra-nationalist and Fascist Iron Guard Movement (1927-41), which inspired the New Right's doctrine.

“IGLHRC commends the Romanian government for respecting the rights of LGBT people and their supporters to free association, assembly, and expression, and for protecting the participants against violence. This was a very positive experience in Eastern Europe,” Adrian Coman, IGLHRC program manager and former executive director of ACCEPT Romania, said in a release. “At the same time, we deplore the fact that Romanian authorities tolerated the display of neo-Fascist symbols, which are banned in Romania and in most European countries. The exercise of the freedom of speech, assembly and expression of the march protesters should not be used instigate violence."

Romanita Iordache, president of ACCEPT, also commented, "The authorization of the anti-LGBT march on the same day and on a very central location in Bucharest is regrettable. It only increased the tension in a context in which the authorities could easily anticipate the recourse to violence against the LGBT march.”


© This Week In Texas

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