Greater than 20 embassies issued a joint assertion urging Serbian authorities to elevate the ban on the EuroPride march.
Tensions mounted in Belgrade as LGBTQ activists promised to stage a EuroPride march on Saturday within the Serbian capital regardless of a authorities ban.
The occasion had been meant because the cornerstone occasion of the EuroPride gathering. However the inside ministry banned the march earlier this week citing safety considerations after right-wing teams threatened to carry protests.
The Balkan nation, a candidate for European Union membership, had been underneath intense worldwide stress to permit the march. Greater than 20 embassies – together with from the USA, France and Britain – issued a joint assertion urging authorities to elevate the ban.
Homosexual marriage just isn’t legally recognised in Serbia, the place homophobia stays deep-seated regardless of some progress through the years in lowering discrimination.
“We, as activists, will use our democratic proper to civil disobedience and can protest,” the Belgrade Delight organisers stated after a courtroom rejected their attraction to overturn the ban.
The inside ministry additionally barred any counter-protests, however some far-right teams promised to rally and collect in entrance of church buildings.
The US embassy urged its residents to keep away from the occasion “due to the potential for unruly crowds, violence, in addition to doable fines”.
‘Shameful give up’
Human rights teams and the EU have referred to as on the Serbian authorities to rescind the ban.
“The Serbian authorities’s determination to cancel EuroPride is a shameful give up to, and implicit sanctioning of, bigotry and threats of illegal violence,” stated Graeme Reid, director of the LGBTQ rights programme at Human Rights Watch.
A minimum of 15 members of the European Parliament introduced that they may be part of the Delight march in a present of solidarity, though the route might be a lot shorter than initially deliberate.
Belgrade Delight marches in 2001 and once more in 2010 have been marred by violence and rioting after far-right teams focused the occasion.
Since 2014, the parade has been organised recurrently with none notable unrest however was protected with a big legislation enforcement presence.
The formal ban got here simply days after hundreds took half in an anti-Delight demonstration in Belgrade, with biker gangs, Orthodox monks and far-right nationalists demanding the EuroPride rally be scrapped.