- Title: RUSSIA: Police prevent Gay pride actions in St.Peterburg and Moscow
- Date: 27th June 2010
- Summary: ST. PETERSBURG (JUNE 26, 2010) (ORIGINALLY 4:3) (REUTERS) GROUP OF PEOPLE GATHERING AT DVORTSOVAYA (PALACE) SQUARE POLICE OFFICERS, CAR ON SQUARE VARIOUS OF GAY PRIDE ACTIVISTS GATHERING GROUP OF YOUNG MEN APPROACHING RALLY SITE ON SQUARE YOUNG MEN STOPPING, TURNING AROUND CLOSE OF ACTIVISTS WATCHING POLICEMEN RUNNING AFTER SUSPECTED ROWDIES POLICE OFFICERS AT POL
- Embargoed: 12th July 2010 13:00
- Keywords:
- Topics: Crime / Law Enforcement
- Reuters ID: LVA9YREHCPQV498YN8W0CPL55V0J
- Story Text: Police prevented a Gay Pride action in St. Petersburg on Saturday (June 26), reportedly detaining several activists who gathered at the Dvortsovaya (Palace) Square in St. Petersburg.
The action which had to be held under the slogans "Homophobia is coutry's disgrace", "Equal rights without compromise" and "My gender is my choice" was not sanctioned by the city authorities.
The Russian Interfax news agency quoted a police source as saying that five gay activists had been detained, three organisers of the action among them.
According to the same source quoted by Interfax, 22 young suspects were detained for an attempt to interfere into Gay Pride action.
The alleged attempt to provoke clashes and to eventually beat the gay activists might have been an action of right wing radical groups, witnesses were saying. A group of young men, some covering their faces with scarves, was approaching the gay and lesbian activists rally site but turned away as they saw special police unit officers.
Meanwhile, in Moscow a dozen of Gay Pride activists gathered at the representative office of St. Petersburg to demand freedom of meetings and speech and to express their support of the gays and lesbian action in St. Petersburg.
Police in Moscow didn't allow the un-sanctioned action to be held as well.
"We won't be allowed to hold a solidarity action, let us thank our law enforcement authorities for their vigilance," said Gay Pride activist who introduced himself as Igor.
"I'm saying it figuratively, we'll find another forms of expressing our views," he added answering a remark from aside that the action was illegal.
The previous attempt to hold a Gay Pride march in Moscow on May 29, has also been also declared illegal by the city authorities, so that the gay and lesbian activists had to elude Russian security services in a five-hour game of cat and mouse.
Homosexuality was illeagal in the Soviet Union and though Russia decriminalised homosexuality in 1993, intolerance remains very widespread. Polls have shown more than 80 percent of Russians see homosexuality as immoral. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
- Copyright Notice: (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2011. Open For Restrictions - http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp
- Usage Terms/Restrictions: None