Police and Protesters
Break Up
Moscow Gay Parade
By REUTERS, from the
NYTimes on the Web, May 27, 2006
MOSCOW -- Russian police,
militant Orthodox Christians and neo-fascists broke up a first ever gay rights
march in Moscow on Saturday, but the homosexuals said their short-lived protest
as a "great victory."
Activists led by 28-year-old Nikolai Alexeyev had planned to lay flowers at the
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier -- a symbol of the World War Two struggle against
fascism, and one of Russia's most sacred places.
But police closed the gates to the park where the eternal flame burns under the
Kremlin walls, and a heavy scrum of women singing hymns and shaven-headed
nationalists tried to charge into the gay activists as the march arrived.
"This is a great victory, an absolute victory -- look at what's happening,"
Alexeyev said as he was dragged, bent almost double, away from the gates by two
policemen.
City authorities had banned the march, which they called an "outrage to
society," while religious leaders from all major faiths condemned it.
Interfax news agency reported police had detained around 100 people after the
clashes.
Even some rival gay activists said the march risked inflaming Russia's
widespread intolerance of homosexuality, and wished Alexeyev had chosen a less
direct way to protest against discrimination and homophobia.
Homosexuality was decriminalized in Russia in 1993, and although some gay clubs
exist in big cities, same-sex couples almost never make a public display of
their affections.
A gay German member of parliament who attended the rally, Volker Beck, was
punched in the face. Beck, a leader of the Greens party and a prominent
gay rights leader, was shown in German TV getting hit in the face.
"I was attacked," Beck told German television. "It was a stone and a fist.
It shows we're not safe in this country. The security forces did not
protect us but instead prevented us from retreating. We were left without
any protection."
"MOSCOW IS NOT SODOM"
The marchers, who seemed to number about 40 although an exact count was
impossible in the mob, were outnumbered at least twofold by men and women
carrying Russian Orthodox icons and chanting "Moscow is not Sodom."
"We must stop them at this first stage, or they'll come and corrupt our
children," said Kirill Bolgarin, 24, who had come to protest despite the pouring
rain.
His friend Andrei, 25, interrupted, and gestured at the eternal flame.
"We are Russians. We are Orthodox. These soldiers died so we could
live like Russians, not so these people could come here and tell us what to do,"
he said.
Alexeyev had invited gay activists from all across Europe to the march, the
culmination of three days of events that were a first Russian attempt to hold a
Gay Pride festival like those in Western cities.
"We came here to lay flowers at this anti-fascist memorial, but the mayor is so
terrified of us that he took the step of ordering the gates closed," said Peter
Tatchell from the British gay rights group OutRage.
"As soon as we arrived we were set upon by fascist gangs and police. Today
is a great shame for Russia because a peaceful protest has been suppressed."
Later, when police had formed a line between the two sides, a group of skinheads
-- young Russian nationalists who have grown in number in recent years and have
been behind a series of attacks on foreign students -- rushed toward the gay
activists.
Their faces masked, they threw flares as they ran, but OMON riot police stopped
them and dragged them to waiting buses.
Passers-by on the pavement outside parliament, which is on one of the capital's
main streets, looked on in disbelief.
"I think it is a sexual abnormality, but if these gays want to do it, they
should," said Robert Antonov, 35. "Why shouldn't they do what they like?
They are people too."
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