By Brody Levesque | BELGRADE, SERBIA -- Fearing a repeat of last year's violence in the Serbian Capital, the Interior Ministry has banned the LGBTQ Equality Rights Pride parade and all public activities. In a statement made available to the press, Serbia's Interior Minister Ivica Dacic said:
"The ban was issued in line with the law on public gatherings which prescribes such a measure in cases of probable disruption of public transport, threats to public health or safety of people and property."Minister Dacic also noted that the planned Belgrade Pride parade and ancillary events posed major security risks for ordinary residents, property, as well as the police."Police will not allow gatherings because if it does, there will be conflicts, casualties, blood and chaos," he said.
Dacic said as many as 5,000 security personnel including anti-riot units, plainclothes agents and mounted police would be needed to ensure security around the parade.
Last year's Pride parade was disrupted when Serbian tactical police units battled hundreds of neo-Nazi anti-gay rioters epeatedly clashing at several locations with rioters who were trying to burst through security cordons. Several parked cars were set on fire or damaged, shop windows were broken, garbage containers were overturned and streets signs destroyed. Several shops were looted before police restored peace late afternoon.
The anti-gay rioters also fired shots and threw Molotov cocktails at the headquarters of the ruling pro-Western Democratic Party, setting the garage of the building on fire. The state TV building and other political parties headquarters were also attacked, with many of the house windows shattered by stones.
The protesters, chanting "death to homosexuals!" hurled bricks, stones, glass bottles and stun grenades at riot police. Police responded by firing tear gas and deploying armored vehicles to disperse the charging protesters in the heart of the capital even after the brief pride march ended.
Traditionally conservative societies across the Balkans have been slow to accept open homosexuality and many gay rights events in the region have ended in violence.
Another government official said that Serbia's National Security Council, comprised of heads of police, security agencies, the military and President Boris Tadic, ordered police to cancel the event after security assessments indicated "extremely serious security threats."
"Our intelligence indicated hooligans are poised to attack gay activists, police, media, offices of political parties, foreign businesses, embassies and burn cars," the official said.Goran Miletic, a human rights activist and an organizer of the pride parade, condemned the decision as a capitulation to hooligans, but said the rally would not go ahead.
"We are shocked," he said. "With this the state capitulated ... a democratic state should be able to guarantee two hours of security to its citizens."Cedomir Jovanovic, the head of the pro-Western opposition Liberal Democrats, said the ban "demonstrates the government's cowardice and weakness."
Serbia must demonstrate its readiness to protect human rights to boost its European Union membership bid. But its society has deeply conservative elements resistant to change.
The Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Irinej called the scheduled Pride event a parade of shame.
"I would call this pestilence a parade of shame which is smearing human dignity and the holiness of life and family," he said.
1 comments:
"The protesters ... hurled bricks, stones, glass bottles and stun grenades at riot police." Nothing quite like acting that way to show how legitimate your protest is and how reasonable your arguments.
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